Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/522

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Heaulmier: m. An Armorer, or Helmet-maker; also, the Heart-cherrie tree.

Heaulmiere: f. The Rudder-port of a ship.

Heaume: m. An helmet, the headpeece of a man of arms; also, the helme, or rudder of a ship; also, the Heart-cherrie, French cherrie, Spanish cherrie; Looke Heaulme. Heaumé. Wearing a helmet, armed with an helmet.

Heaumer. To put on an helmet, to arme his head with an helmet.

Hebbe de la mer. Th'ebbe, or ebbing of the sea.

Hebene: m. Heben, or Ebonie; the blacke, and hard wood of a certaine tree growing in Æthyopia, and the East Indies.

Hebené: m. ée: f. Blacke, Heben-like; made of Ebonie. Sourcils hebenez. Blacke, dismall, frowning, lowring browes.

Hebenin: m. ine: f. Of, or belonging to, Ebonie.

Heberge: f. A house, lodging, harbour.

Hebergé: m. ée: f. Housed, lodged, harboured.

Hebergement: m. as Heberge. Heberger. To lodge, harbor, dwel, abide in; also, to lodge, harbour, house, giue house-roome, lend a dwelling vnto.

Hebeté: m. ée: f. Dull, sottish, witlesse, blockish, blunt, slow, sencelesse, heauie headed; also, dulled, blunted; made blockish.

Hebeter. To dull, blunt, sot, make blockish.

Hebraïsme: m. Hebrewisme; the speech, fashion, or disposition of the Hebrewes.

Hebrieu: m. An Hebrew, or Jew; also, the Hebrew, or language of the Hebrewes. Il entend l'Hebrieu. He is drunke, or (as we say) learned: (from th'Analogie of the Latine word Ebrius.) Hecatombe. A Sacrifice wherein an hundred beasts were killed.

Hectique: com. Sicke of an Hectick, or continuall Feauer; (hence) also, meager, leane, dried vp, in a Consumption.

Hederiforme: com. Fashioned like Ivie. Veine hederiforme. A certaine veine which passes downe along by the sides of the wombe.

Hedre. as Hestre; A Beech tree. Hedret. Looke Haidroict. Hee. (An Interiection of lamenting) Ay me.

Hei. as Hé. Helaine: m. Elecampane, Scabwort, Horseheale.

Helas. Alas, wellaway, welladay.

Helenites. An Order of White Friers, that weare a yellow crosse on their breasts.

Heleoseline: m. Smallage.

Helepolle. A great woodden engine wherewith, in old time, the tops of rampiers were battered.

Helesie: f. A many-coloured garden hearb, in proportion somewhat like Beets.

Heliotrope: m. The hearbe Turnesole, Ruds, Wartwort; also, a precious stone which, as a burning glasse, receiueth, and retorteth the Sunne-beames.

Helixine. Barren, or creeping Ivie.

Helvenaque. The name of a kind of grape.

Hematide. Pierre Hematide. The Bloudstone.

Hemicraine: m. The Megrum, or headache by fits.

Hemicranique: com. Troubled with, or subiect vnto, the Megrum.

Hemicycle: m. An Hemicicle, or halfe circle.

Hemine: f. as Emine. Hemiolie. So much, and halfe so much againe; (an Arithmeticall proportion.)

Hemiplexie: f. A dead Palsie, in halfe of the bodie.

Hemisphere: m. An hemisphere; halfe the compasse of the visible heauen.

Hemistique: com. A halfe verse.

Hemitrité. la fiebvre hemitritée. An Ague compounded of a continuall Tertian, and an intermittent Quotidian.

Hemorrhagie: f. An abundant flux of bloud.

Hemorrhoïdal: m. ale: f. Veine hemorrhoïdale. A small branch of the spleene veine comming to the fundament; also, a certaine veine in the necke of a womans wombe; (Looke Veine.) Hemorrhoïde: f. An issue of bloud by the veines of the fundament.

Hemorrhuës: f. The same, called ordinarily, the Emrods, or Piles.

Hemy. (An Interiection of lamenting) Ay me, alas for me.

Hen heu hasch. Fained words, wherewith Rabelais expresseth a coughing. Hen hen. Oh hò: ¶Rab. Hennir. To neigh, or whinnie like a horse; Looke Hannir. Hennissement: m. The neighing, or whinnying of a horse.

Henouars: m. Salt-Porters, carriers of salt, whereof onely 24 be allowed, within Paris, to carrie it from the Salt-wharfe vnto the Garners, & Warehouses of Marchants.

Henricus. A golden Crowne worth about two French Crownes.

Henry: m. (A proper name) Henrie, Harrie; also, a coine of gold worth about 6s. sterl. Bon Henry. Roman Sorrell, round Sorrell, Tours Sorrell; also, the hearbe which we call, Good Henrie, and All-good. Double Henry. Is worth about 14s. sterl. Ducat Henry. Is ordinarily worth more by 6d. sterl. then the Crowne of the Sunne.

Heouse. Holly, or the Holme tree.

Hepathique: f. The mosse called Liuerwort, and stone Liuerwort; also, the hearbe golden Trefoyle, noble Liuerwort, three-leaued Liuerwort, noble Agrimonie, hearbe Trinitie.

Hepatique: f. The same.

Hepatique: com. Hepaticall; of, or belonging to, the liuer; also, Liuer-helping; comforting a whole, or curing a diseased, liuer. Aloës hepatique. The middle (in goodnesse) of the three sorts of Aloes.

Heptaphon. (¶Rab.) Seuen-fold.

Heptomagene: m. The seuenth male.

Herage: m. An ayrie of hawkes; and hence, a brood, kind; stocke, linage.

Herauder. To blaze; publickly to denounce, manifest, or commend.

Herault: m. An Herauld; a King of Armes.

Heraut. as Herault.

Herbage: m. Herbage, Pasture; or that which is payed for the herbage, or pasture of cattell; also, Common of pasture in other mens woods, or grounds.
  Herbage mort. Is a penie, or halfepenie Tourn. paied by euery poore Cottager, or customarie tenant vnto the Lord that hath high, or meane Jurisdiction ouer him, for euerie sheepe he hath, if he haue not aboue ten, or (as in some places) twentie.
  Herbage vif. Is euerie tenth sheepe (where the tenant hath more then ten, or twentie) chosen by the Lord, or his Officer: These Rights grow due from Christmas eue to Midsummer, and then are leuied.