Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/669

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Obumbrer. To obumbrate, ouershadow, cast a mist ouer, darken, obscure.

Ocaigne, & Ocaine: f. Dogs leather; or, a dogs skin well dressed.

Occasion: f. An occasion; cause; oportunitie, fit season. Occasion trouve qui son chat bat: Prov. He that would beat his Cat finds a cause for it.

Occasionnellement. Occasionally, by occasion.

Occasionner. To occasion, or be the occasion of.

Occiant: m. as Occident. Occiant: m. ante: f. Killing, slaying, murthering, slaughtering.

Occident. The Occident, the West.

Occidental: m. ale: f. Occidentall, Westerlie, Westerne.

Occipital: m. ale: f. Occipitall; belonging to the noddle, or hinder part of the head.

Occire. To kill, slay, murther, slaughter, maßacre.

Occis: m. ise: f. Killed, murthered, slaughtered, slaine.

Occision: f. An occision, killing, slaying, murthering, slaughtering; also, a murther, or slaughter.

Occultateur: m. A concealor, or hider.

Occultation: f. An occultation, concealing, hiding.

Occulte: com. Hidden, close, priuie, couert, concealed, secret, obscure.

Occulté: m. ée: f. Hidden, concealed, obscured.

Occultement. Hiddenly, priuily, closely, couertly, secretly.

Occulter. To hide, conceale, couer, keepe secret, obscure.

Occupateur: m. The occupier, possessor, holder, enioyer of a thing which he hath seized.

Occupation: f. An occupation, busineße, imployment; also, an occupying, vsing, enioying; a seizure of; also, a disseisin, or vsurpation.

Occupé: m. ée: f. Occupied, busied, imployed in; troubled, held, or intangled with; also, woon, seized, vsurped forcibly taken, violently gotten.

Occuper. To occupy; to busie, trouble, imploy; also, to vse, possesse, enioy; also, to win, take, vsurpe by force; to seize on, to disseize one. Occuper aucun de. To accuse, or appeach of; to charge with (an old phrase.)

Occurrence: f. An occurrence, or accident; a thing met with, matter happened in the way.

Occurrent: m. An occurrent; or, as Occurrence. Occurrent: m. ente: f. Occurrent, accidentall, happening, or comming in the way.

Occurrer. To occurre, meet with, come in place, offer it selfe, be in the way; to happen, or fall out on a suddaine.

Oceane. La mer Oceane. The Ocean, or maine Sea.

Oceanique: com. Of, or belonging to, the Ocean; residing, or liuing in the Maine.

Oche: f. A nicke, nocke, or notch; the cut of a Tally; also, a little ground inclosed with a Quick-set hedge, and fruit trees.

Oché: m. ée: f. Nicked, nocked, notched; cut as a Tally; also, moued, stirred, wagged, figged, wagled.

Ocher. To nicke, nocke, notch; to cut, as a Tally; also, to moue, stirre, fig, wag, wagle.

Ocieux: m. euse: f. Jdle, quiet, restfull, at ease, at leisure, that hath little to doe.

Ocre: m. (Painters) Oker.

Ocrisse: f. A scould, shrew, vnquiet or impatient woman.

Octaëdre. A bodie, or figure of eight faces.

Octante. Eightie, fourescore.

Octantiesme. The eightieth.

Octave: f. An Octaue; an eighth; a proportion, or the number, of eight. L'Octave d'une feste. The Octaue, eight dayes, on the eighth day, after a holyday. Les octaves en seront bien longues. The blow indeed is giuen, but it may be reuenged a long time hēce; or, men are like enough to be long sencible of it.

Octenaire. An eight; the number, or a proportion, of eight.

Octimestre: com. Of eight moneths.

Octobre: m. October.

Octonaire: com. Eight, of eight.

Octostique: f. A Staffe, or Stanzo of eight verses.

Octosyllabe: com. Of eight syllables.

Octroy: m. A graunt; a grace; a priuiledge conferred, or suit giuen; also, free will, or good will; also, the graunt of a Subsidie vnto the Prince. Deniers d'octroy. Looke Denier. Octroyé: m. ée: f. Graunted, accorded, condescended vnto; bestowed, or conferred vpon.

Octroyer. To graunt, accord, yeeld, consent, or condescend vnto; to bestow, or conferre vpon. Assez octroye qui mot ne dit: Pro. He that sayes nothing yeelds enough.

Octuple: com. Eight times doubled, sixteene, twice eight.

Oculaire: com. Ocular, perspicuous, euident, apparant; also, belonging to the eye. Veine oculaire. Part of the forehead veine; called so while it accoasts the eye.

Oculairement. Perspicuously, euidently, apparantly, before the eyes.

Oculé: m. ée: f. Circumspect, soone-spying, cleere-seeing, sightie, quicke of sight.

Ode. A way. ¶Rab. Ode: f. Dyers Woad; also, a Poeticall Ode, or Song.

Odelette: f. A small, or short Ode.

Odette. as Odelette.

Odeur: f. An odor, sent, smell, waft; sauor; also, the sence of smelling; also, an inkling, suspition, or doubt of. Il ne l'a pas en bonne odeur. He disgusts him, or distasts him much; he hath no good conceit of him. De mauvaise odeur. Telle chose est de m. o. Such a thing is loathsome, or most vnsauorie; of ill reputation; most lewd, faultie, filthie.

Odieux: m. euse: f. Hatefull, odious, loathsome, contrarie to mans nature; also, haynous, detestable, horrible, worthie of hatred.

Odorant. as Odoriferant; or, smelling, senting.

Odorat: m. The sence, or act, of smelling.

Odoration: f. as Odorement. Odoré: m. ée: f. Smelt, sented, wafted, vented.

Odorement: m. A smelling, senting, wafting, venting; also, a smell, waft, sent, vent.

Odorer. To smell, sent, waft, vent.

Odoriferant: m. ante: f. Odoriferous, sweet, pleasantly smelling, full of perfume.

Odorifique: com. Odoriferous.

Oé. Woeh; the voice wherewith Carters vse to stop their horses.

Oeconomant: m. The Stewardship, or Controllership of a familie; and particularly, the Stewardship of an Ecclesiasticall liuing, or the Receiuorship of the reuenue thereof, during vacancie.

Oeconome: m. The Gouernor, Steward, or Controller