Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/67

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Arné: m. ée: f. Weake-backed, feeble-rained, loose-*ioynted; vnfit, or vnable to please a woman.

Arneat. The rauenous bird, called a Shrike, Nynmurder, Wariangle.

Arnement: m. A weakening, strayning, or breaking the reines of.

Arner. To weaken, enfeeble, straine, crush, breake the reines, or backe, of.

Arnoglosse. Plantaine, Waybred.

Arollé: m. ée: f. At it, at worke, whose hand is in.

Aromat. as, Aromatique. Aromates. Spices, fragrant Simples.

Aromatic rozat. A certaine sweet pouder, good for the stomacke and heart.

Aromaticité: f. Sweet sauour, pleasant smell, pleasing tast; as, of spices.

Aromatique: m. An aromaticall Simple, or compound. Aromatique gariofilé. A certaine composition wherein there are cloues; good for the passions of the heart.

Aromatique: com. Aromaticall, spicie, odoriferous, fragant, sweet-smelling.

Aromatizé: m. ée: f. Perfumed, aromatized, spiced; seasoned, or sweetened with spices.

Aromatizer. To aromatize; to perfume, season, or sweeten with spices, or fragrant Simples.

Aron. The hearbe Aron, Calues foot, Ramp, Starchwoort, Cuckoe-pint, Priests pintle.

Aronde: f. A tronke to shoot in; also, as Arondelle. Arondeau: m. A young Swallow.

Arondelet. as, Arondeau. Arondelle: f. A Swallow. Arondelle de mer. The flying fish called the sea Bat, or sea Swallow; also, a kind of mullet, called otherwise, Faulcon de mer. Arondelle de riuage. Looke, Hirondelle. La grande arondelle. The great, blacke, and scriching, Martin. L'herbe d'arondelles. Celandine, great Celandine, Swallowort, Tetterwort. Queuë d'arondelle. See Queuë. Le venuë des arondelles. is about the two and twenteith of March.

Aroy: m. A plough.

Arpailleur: m. A seller of old trinkets, or of old yron; also, a finer of mettals, or gold-finer.

Arpent: m. An acre, or furlong of ground; the most ordinarie one called (sometimes) L'arpent de France, is 100 perches square (or euery way) after 18 feet to the perche.
  L'arpent de bois; containes, in most places, two roods and a halfe; the rood 40 perches; the perch 24 feet; and the foot 24 ynches.
  L'arpent de bois de Bourgoigne. containes 440 perches.
  L'arpent de Clermont. is in most places 100 Verges, in others but 70; after 26 feet to the verge.
  L'arpent de Dunois. is of 100 perches, after 20 feet to the perch.
  L'arpent de France. as before, in Arpent.
  L'arpent de Nevers. is foure quarters square; the quarter tenne fadomes; the fadome six ordinarie feet.
  L'arpent de Paris. is 100 perches square after 22 feet to the perche; (yet is not this proportion of the Perche generall; for in some places about Paris it contains 25 feet, and in others (after the ordinarie rate) but 18.)

 Arpent de la Perche. contains 100 perches, the perch 24 feet, the foot 13 ynches.   Arpent de Poictou. is 80 paces square.   L'arpent Romain. was 240 feet long, and 120 feet broad.

Arpentage: m. A suruey taken of land.

Arpenté: m. ée: f. Surueyed, or measured, as land; also, runne.

Arpentement. A surueying, or measuring of land.

Arpenter. To measure, or suruey land; also, to run.

Arpenterie: f. A surueying, or measuring of land.

Arpenteur: m. A surueyor, or measurer of land.

Arpilleux: m. Rauenous, deuouring.

Arquebousade. as Arquebusade. Arquebouse, & Arquebousier. as Arquebuse, and Arquebusier. Arquebusade: f. The shot of a caleeuer, or harquebuse.

Arquebuse: f. An harguebuse, caleeuer, or hand-*gunne. Arquebuse de chasse. A fowling peece. Arquebuse à croc. An harguebuse a-crocke (somewhat bigger than a musket.) Arquebuse à fusil. A Snap-haunce. Arquebuse à grand ressort. A French harquebuse. Arquebuse à rouët. A fire-locke, or Peece that goes with a fire-locke.

Arquebusier: m. An harquebusier, or small-shot; one that serues with an harquebuse, or caleeuer.

Arquemie. Seeke, Alquemie. Arquer. To arche; to bend, crooke, or bow like an arch, or bowe.

Arrabler. To rape, and rend; to rauine, rob, spoile; to get by hooke or by crooke; (an old word.)

Arraché: m. ée: f. Rooted vp; drawne, torne, plucked out, or vp by the root; pulled away by violence.

Arrachement: m. A rooting vp; a drawing, tearing, plucking, vp by the root; a pulling away by violence. Arrachement d'une voulte. The root, bottome, or beginning of a vault; as Tas de charge. D'Arrache-pied. Continually, without intermission, without discontinuance, together.

Arracher. To root vp; to draw, teare, plucke vp by the root; to pull away by violence; to plucke out. Il arrache les bonnes herbes, & plante les mauvaises. He reuiles the good, and flatters the bad; or, he supplants vertue, to support vice.

Arracheur: m. A puller, tearer, rooter vp.

Arrachis: m. as Arrachement. Arrager. as Enrager. Arraisonné: m. ée: f. Reasoned, talked, discoursed, fallen in speech with.

Arraisonnement: m. A reasoning, talking, discoursing with.

Arraisonner. To reason, conferre, talke, discourse, fall in speech, enter into tearmes, with.

Arramir. To sweare.

Arrangé: m. ée: f. Ranked, ranged, disposed, ordered, arrayed, digested, sorted, set it in place.

Arrangement. An ordering, sorting, ranging, ranking.

Arranger. To ranke, range, dispose, order, sort; array; disgest; set in it right place, rowe, or array.

Arrapant. Suddenly, and violently plucking, or snatching away.

Arraper. To take by violence; to snatch away; to gripe, or plucke away on a suddaine.

Arrassade. A Salamander. </poem>