Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/527

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prosperitie, felicitie, fortunatenesse.

Heureusement. Happily, blessedly, blissefully, fortunately, prosperously.

Heureuseté: f. as Heureté. Heureux: m. euse: f. Happie, blessed, blissefull, prosperous, luckie, fortunate. Il est bien heureux qui se mesle de ses affaires: Prov. He is verie happie that followes his owne businesse; (then is the dullard that cannot, the sluggard that will not, and the vnfree that must not, doe it, verie vnhappie.)

Heurlement: m. A howling, or yelling.

Heurler. To howle; Seeke Hurler. Heurlerie: f. as Heurlement. Heurt: m. A shocke; push, or dash; a violent meeting, or conflict, scuffling, or incounter; a knocke, or knocking together of; also, a peece of high ground; also, the top, or vpper part of a mountaine. Tout à heurt. Headie, all-ahead. Bastir en heurt. To build high; or on the vpper part, or side, of a hill. Gare le heurt. See Gare. Ils ont eu tant de heurts. They haue beene so much afflicted; they haue receiued so many ioults; so many mischiefes haue assaulted them.

Heurtade: f. A shocke, knocke, iurre, ioult, push, dash.

Heurtant. Shocking, pushing, knocking, iurring, ioulting; violently meeting.

Heurté: f. as Heureté. Heurte. à toute heurte. Still, euer, euerie foot, now and then.

Heurté: m. ée: f. Knocked, pushed, ioulted, iurred, violently hit against.

Heurtement: m. A knocking, ioulting, pushing, dashing, striking, iurring, violent hitting against.

Heurter. To knocke, push, iurre, ioult, strike, dash, or hit violently against. Heurter des pieds. To stampe, or applaud by often stamping. Se Heurter à vne pierre. To stumble at a stone. Heurter la teste contre l'huis. To runne his head against the doore; to take wax off the doore with his head. Hardiment heurte à la porte qui bonne nouvelle apporte: Prov. He that brings good newes boldly knocks at doore.

Heurtes: f. Small Azure balls; tearmed (in Heraldrie) hurts on men, and tongue-moles on women.

Heurtis: m. as Heurtement. Heuse. Looke House. Heusse: f. The Linch pinne, whereby the arme of th' axle-*tree is kept within the naue of a Cartwheele &c.

Heyron: m. as Hairon; also, a sea-Mew. ¶Savoyard. Hiacinthe. Looke Hyacinthe. Hiacinthin: m. ine: f. Light-blue; Purple, Violet; of the colour of a Iacinth (flower.)

Hibernal: m. ale: f. Winterie; of, or belonging to, the Winter.

Hibou: m. An Owle; the ordinarie great Owle. Hibou cornu. as Moyen duc. See Duc. On ne peut faire de hibou esparvier: Prov. One cannot make a Hawke of an Owle.

Hideur: f. Dread, horror, quaking, feare, (or the cause thereof) a thing horrible, and fearefull to behold; also, ghastlinesse, terriblenesse, ouglinesse, hideousnesse.

Hideusement. Hideously, ghastly, grimly, horribly,

terribly, fearefully.

Hideux: m. euse: f. Hideous, grimme, dreadfull, ghastlie, terrible, horrible.

Hie: f. A Rammer; or Pauiers beetle; also, a Commaunder, or water-Pile Sledge, wherewith great stakes are driuen downe into the ground.

Hié: m. ée: f. Rammed in, driuen, or beaten downe.

Hieble: m. Wallwort, dwarfe Elderne, Danewort.

Hiement: m. A ramming; a driuing downe of stones, or piles into the ground.

Hier. To ramme; to beat, or driue downe stones, or piles into the ground; also, to beat flat, or sadden (as a floore) with beating.

Hier. Yesterday. Devant hier. Two dayes agoe. Hier vachier huy chevalier: Prov. Looke Vachier. Hieracite. Pierre h. A kind of Bloud-stone, or stone that stauncheth bloud.

Hierarchie: f. An Hierarchie; a sacred Principalitie, a holie Gouernment.

Hiere piere. A certaine yellow, and verie bitter composition in powder.

Hierobotane: f. Veruine, Junoes teares, holie hearbe, Mercuries moist bloud.

Hierre: m. Ivie; Seeke Lierre. Hierre terrestre. Ground Iuie, Alehoofe, Cats foot, Gill-creep-by-the-ground.

Hileux: m. euse: f. Blacke-tayled, or blacke on the tayle, as a Beane is.

Hillots: m. Fellowes; ¶Gasc. ¶Rab. Hinard: m. arde: f. Wry-neckt, wry-headed.

Hinnellement. Seeke Isnellement. Hipate: f. A sixt; or the proportion of six, in Musicke.

Hipocras: m. (The compound wine called) Hipocras. Hipocras d'eau. Metheglin; wine, or drinke made of honey and water.

Hipogriphe: m. Looke Hypogriphe. Hipothecaire. Seeke Hypothecaire. Hipothequé: m. ée: f. Ingaged, morgaged, layed to pawne.

Hipothequer. To pawne, ingage, or morgage (immoueables.)

Hippiatrie: f. Horse-phisicke.

Hippocras. as Hipocras. Hippoglosse: m. Horse-tongue, Double-tongue, Tongue-blade.

Hippopotame: m. A water-horse (liuing in the riuer Nilus) that hath feet like an Ox, backe and mane like a Horse, tuskes like a Bore, and a winged tayle.

Hirable. as Giraffe. Hiraudie: f. A paltrie garment (In old French.)

Hircin: m. ine: f. Goat-like; of a Goat. Branche hircine. Brank-Vrsin, Beares-claw, Beares-breech.

Hire: f. A Rammer, or Beater.

Hireté. as Heredité; (an old word.) Hirondelle, or Hirundelle; A Swallow; Seeke Arondelle. Hirondelle de mer. as in Arondelle; also, the small ash-coloured Mew, which, after the departure of the ordinarie sea-Mew, flyes alone, and in flying fishes along Riuers. Hirondelle de rivage. A sea Swallow; a little bird that builds in the banks of riuers.

Hisnel. Seeke Isnel. Hisope: f. (The hearbe) Hisope.

Histoire: f. A Historie, Storie, Chronicle, Relation.