Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/554

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Insinuer. To enter; to register; or, to enter into a Register, or Office-booke; or (as a French Lawyer describes it) publier, & notifier par Acte par devant le Iuge, qui ordonne en estre faict Registre. S'Insinuer en. To insinuate; creepe, wind, steale, conuey, himselfe into; gently to intrude, closely to incroach vpon.

Insipide: com. Vnsauorie, smacklesse, wallowish, without relish; also, weake of iudgement, or in discourse, fond, vndiscreet.

Insipidité: f. Jnsipiditie, wallowishnesse, vnsauourinesse, dullnesse in tast, want of smacke; also, fondnesse, indiscretion, weakenesse of iudgement, or in discourse.

Insipience: f. Dotage, indiscretion, sottishnesse, ideotisme, ignorance.

Insipient. Sottish, doting, witlesse, vndiscreet, foolish, ignorant.

Insister. To insist on; to vrge hard, stand much vpon, a matter; to labour, sollicite, pursue eagerly, be earnest with, or vpon; also, to rest, persist, abide fast, continue firmely.

Insociable: com. Vnsociable, vncompanable, inconuersible, incompatible.

Insolation: f. A sunning; a setting, or laying open, in the Sunne.

Insolemment. Insolently, malapertly, sawcily, presumptuously, arrogantly.

Insolence: f. Insolencie, sawcinesse, malapertnesse, presumption, arrogance.

Insolent: m. te: f. Jnsolent, malapert, sawcie, presumptuous, arrogant.

Insolide: com. Vnsolide, vnsound; loosse, weake, feeble. Les Obligations du defunct sont insolides contre tous les heritiers; viz. All the heires are not lyable vnto them; (yet may the Creditor addresse himselfe vnto any one of them.)

Insolidement. Vnsoundly, vnsolidely, weakely, feebly; also, throughly, wholly, for the whole.

Insolite: com. Strange, vnused, vnaccustomed, vnwont.

Insolu: m. uë: f. Vnpayed, vndischarged, vndefrayed.

Insolvable: com. Vnpayable, vnlikelie to be payed; also, vnapt, or vnable to pay.

Insoluble: com. Jnsoluble, indißoluble, vndissoluable.

Inspecteur: m. An inspector, ouerseer, controller; one that narrowly obserues, or pries into, mens behauior.

Inspection: f. An inspection; speculation; ouerseeing; prying, or looking into; viewing, or looking on.

Insperé: m. ée: f. Vnhoped for; vnlooked after.

Insperément. as Inesperément. Inspersé: m. ée: f. Jnspersed; sprinckled, or cast vpon.

Inspiration: f. An inspiration, or inspiring; a blowing, or breathing into; an instinct.

Inspiré: m. ée: f. Inspired; moued; blowne, or breathed into.

Inspirer. To inspire; breath into; moue.

Instabilité: f. Instabilitie, vnsteadinesse, vnstedfastnesse; fickleneße, inconstancie, wauering, variablenesse.

Instable: com. Vnstable, vnsteadie, tottering, shittle, vnstedfast; flitting, wauering, fickle, skittish, inconstant.

Instablement. Vnstably, vnsteadily, totteringly, vnset-*

*ledly, vnstedfastly.

Installation: f. An installation, or installing; the setling of an Officer.

Installé: m. ée: f. Installed; setled, established, placed surely in.

Installer. To install; to settle, establish, place surely in.

Instamment. Instantly; earnestly, vrgently, importunately; diligently, inceßantly.

Instance: f. Instance, earnestnesse, vrgencie, importunitie, continuall diligence; also (in Law) a cause, or point in a cause, contested. En premiere instance. At first, of the first ranke, in chiefe, or in the first degree, before all others. Faire instance sur. To vrge vehemently, to stand much vpon. Faire l'instance. C'est, debatre la chose. Instant: m. An instant, point, moment.

Instauration: f. An instauration; restoring, renewing, repairing, reedifying.

Instauré: m. ée: f. Restored, renewed, repaired, re-*edified.

Instaurer. To restore, renew, reforme; reedifie, repaire.

Instigateur: m. An instigator; stirrer, incitor, vrger, egger on, prouoker, pricker forward; In Law, Se prend generalement, & pour celuy qui seulemēt se plaind sans se rendre partie; & pour celuy qui instruict l'accusation, donnant des preuves, & poursuyvant l'instruction du procez. Instigation: f. An instigation, stirring, inciting, vrging; a pricke, spurre, prouocation, strong motion vnto.

Instigué: m. ée: f. Instigated, incited, vrged.

Instiguer. To instigate, incite, stirre, vrge, egg, spurre on, pricke forward.

Instillation: f. An instillation; a gentle infusion; a letting, or falling, in drop by drop; a putting, or powring in by little and little.

Instiller. To drop, trill, drizle; gently to inforce; to let, or fall, in drop by drop; to put in, or powre on by little and little.

Instinct: m. An instinct, or inclination; an inward stirring, motion, or persuasion; an inspiration.

Institué: m. ée: f. Instituted, enacted, ordained, established, appointed, brought in, set vp.

Instituer. To institute, enact, ordaine, decree, establish, appoint; bring in, begin, set vp.

Institutaire. (A Title of the Emperour Iustinian, who writ the Institutes of the Ciuill Law.)

Institute: m. Iustinians Booke of Institutes.

Institution: f. An Institution; Precept; Ordinance, Decree, Statute, Establishment; an ordaining, appointing, setting vp, or bringing in.

Instruction: f. An instruction, direction, document, precept; caueat; memoriall, remembrance; also, instruction, teaching, tutoring, ordering.

Instructive: f. as Instruction. Instruer. as Instruire. Instruict: m. cte: f. Jnstructed, taught, tutored; directed; forewarned; furnished, well appointed; also, suborned. Vn procez instruict. A Cause made readie for hearing.

Instruire. To teach, tutor, instruct; forewarne, direct; fashion, traine vp; furnish with matter; prompt, suborne.