Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/494

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Glu: f. Glew; or (more properly) birdlime. Glu de Damas. Birdlime of Damascus; is made of the Sebesten, or Assyrian Plumme.

Gluant: m. te: f. Glewish, glewie, clammie; glewing, cleauing, sticking to, like birdlime, whatsoeuer it toucheth.

Gluaux: m. Lime-twigs.

Gluber. To flay, or pill.

Gluc. ergo gluc. (A word vsed by the Schollers of Paris, in derision of an absurd conclusion;) Well concluded Roger; wisely brother James.

Glué: m. ée: f. Limed; caught with, or intangled by, birdlime; also, glewed.

Gluement: m. A glewing; a fast-ioyning, sure-closing; a liming, a catching with, or intangling in, birdlime.

Gluer. To lime; to glew; to ioyne, or close verie fast, as with birdlime, or glew; to catch with, or intangle in, birdlime.

Glueur: m. A glewer.

Glueur: f. Glewinesse, clamminesse.

Glueux: m. Glewie, full of glew; also, as Gluant. Gluïts: m. Long, and whole straw.

Gluön: m. A lime-twig.

Glutinosité: f. Glutinositie, glewinesse, clamminesse.

Gluy. as Gluïts; Straw. Glyphonoire: m. as Clifoire; A Plaisterers bosse: ¶Rab. Goache. perdrix g. The gray Partridge.

Goalon. A slouen; one that weares his clothes vnhandsomely, or puts them on carelesly; so tearmed about Blois. Gob. l'avalla tout de gob. At one gulpe, or, as one gobbet, he swallowed it.

Gobeau: m. A bit, gobbet, or morsell; also, a violl, or strait-mouthed vessell (of glasse;) also, a Maser, or great Goblet.

Gobelet: m. A Goblet, Bole, or wide-mouthed cup to drinke in; also, the flower Crowfoot, Gold-knap, Yellow Craw. Le gobelet du gland. The head, shell, or cup of an Acorne. Le gobelet d'vne Rose. The bud of a Rose when it is almost full-blowne; or (more properly) the fiue-leaued Cup, or huske thereof; called, by some, the fiue brothers of the Rose. Le retraict du Gobelet. The Butterie, or Wine-*sellar.

Gobelets. des gobelets. Crowfoot, Gold-knap, yellow Craw, Butter-flower.

Gobelin: m. A Goblin, Hob-goblin, Robin-good-fellow, Bug.

Gobelin. face gobeline. A crimzon face; the visage of a plie-pot.

Gobeliner. To play the Goblin; to rumble, or make a horrible noise, like a Goblin.

Gobe-mouche. as Moineau de haye. Gobequinaut: m. A greedie feeder, a rauenous, and ouglie deuourer; one that makes bricke-walls of his chaps, or hastily swallowes whole, and vnchawed gobbets.

Gober. To rauine, deuoure; feed greedily, swallow great morsells, let downe whole gobbets. Gobe quinault. Sup her vp tis cold ynough, downe with it whoresonne.

Goberge: f. A kind of Haddocke, or Cod-fish.

Goberger. To cast, vomit, spue.

Gobier. chant gobier. Plaine, homelie, ordinarie, without Art.

Gobisson: m. A fashion of long, and quilted horsemans cassocke, or coat, vsed in old time.

Gocourt. as Court; Short: ¶Rab. (v.m.) Godal: m. A tit, a iade: ¶Norm. Godde. vne lasche godde. A sloathfull hylding.

Goddon: m. A filthie glutton, or swiller; one that hath a vile wide swallow.

Gode. as Godde. Godeau: m. A Gardeners setting yron. En godeau. Right downward; (a Gardeners tearme.)

Godeluré: m. ée: f. Fumbled, crumpled, ruffled. Godelureau: m. A gull, fop, asse, coxcombe; a proud woodcocke.

Godemare. The disease called, the Night-mare; also, a sound made, or word cast out, at a feast, whereby the guests are warned to forbeare eating for a certain time; (This Godemare was a King of Bourgongne, so redoubted by the French, that th' onely sound of his name astonied them, & made them desist from that they were in hand with: yet was he at length surprised by Clotaire in Autun, and the terrour of his name turned into a ieast.)

Godemiche: f. A Dildoe.

Goderon: m. The set of a (single) ruffe, after the Spanish (or plaine) fashion; also, the setting thereof; also, a ruffe so set; also, as Godran; also, a fashion of imbossement vsed by Goldsmithes, &c, and tearmed knurling. Goderon de beau langage. affectation in speech, the trimming of the tongue, with quaint phrases, choyce tearmes, &c. À goderons. Wrought with knurles.

Goderonné: m. ée: f. Set, as a ruffe; pitched, or tighted, as a ship; also, knurled, wrought or set with knurles. Oeufs goderonnez. Whose white, and yolke are beaten together with a little veriuice.

Goderonner. To set, a ruffe; to pitch or tight a ship; to worke, or set with knurles.

Godet: m. An earthen Bole; a stone Cup, or Jug.

Godichon. mon godichon. My pillocke.

Godillon: m. A girdle: ¶Poictevin. Godin: m. ine: f. Neat, fine, trimme, spruce, comelie, proper, handsome.

Godinet: m. ette: f. Prettie, dapper, feat, peart, indifferently handsome.

Godinette: f. A prettie peart lasse; alouing, or louelie girle.

Godiveaux. See Goudiveaux. Godran: m. Ship-pitch; or, the Pitch (and Tarre) wherwith ships are tighted, or trimmed.

Godron. See Goderon. Godronné: m. ée: f. as Goderonné. Godronner vne fraise. To set a ruffe.

Goerin. as Gorret. Goés. The name of a kind of Grapes.

Goëtie: f. The Blacke Art, diuellish Magicke, or Witchcraft.

Goffe: com. Dull, sottish, doltish, lumpish, blockish, heauie headed, grosse-witted, sodden-brained.

Goffre: f. A wafer; also a honnie combe; also a kinde of scurfe, like to the ordinarie one, but that the humor it yeelds is more like, in colour, to honie.

Gogaille. (A cheerefull, or cheering word, much like our) frolick.

Gogayer. as Goguer.