Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/719

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

 
  Petit bras. The vpper part of the arme, from the elbow to the shoulder. Petit cheval de Dieu. The little Jnsect called, a Lady-*cow. Petits choux. A kind of puffe-cakes of two sorts; the one round, and plump as an apple; the other also round, but much flatter. La petite oye. The Goose-giblets; Looke Oye. Petit pied. See Pied. Petit à petit. Faire and softly, now one and then one, wiredrawer-like; by leisure, degrees, pawses, little peeces, or parcels. Faire le petit. To bow, encline, or humble himselfe; to lowte it, or beare himselfe lowly; also, to liue meanely, neerely, or poorely; to make no manner of shew in the world. Petit à petit on va bien loing: Pro. Faire and softly goeth farre. Petite chose de loing poise; &, Petit fardeau poise à la longue: Prov. A light thing farre borne heauie growes. Petit homme abat grand chesne: Pro. A low man fells a tall Oke. Petite pluye abat grand vent: Pro. See Grand. Les petis ruisseaux font les grandes rivieres: Pro. Of narrow brookes come nauigable riuers. De petit petit, & d'assez assez: Prov. Of a little take a little, of a mickle mickle. De petite chose peu de plaid: Prov. A sleight cause needeth but sleight canuassing. De petit enfant petit dueil: Pro. Seeke Enfant. De petit esguillon poind on bien grande asnesse: Pro. The little goad pricks on the great she Asse. De petit peché petit pardon: Prov. Small pardon will suffice for a small fault. Du petit vient on au grand: Pro. See Grand. En petit buisson trouve on grand lievre; &, En petite cheminée fait on bien grand feu; &, En petite maison Dieu à grand part; &, En petite teste gist grand sens; &, Es petites boistes met on les bons onguens. (Prouerbs in commendation of little things.) De grands vanteurs petis faiseurs: Pro. Great boast, and small roast; big words poore worke; the more you talke the leße you will doe. Tel est petit qui boit bien: Prov. A little man may haue a great swallow.

Petitement. Smally, slenderly; scarcely, scantly; meanely, poorely, lowlily; shortly, lowly.

Petitesse: f. Smallnesse, littlenesse; prettinesse; exilitie, slendernesse, exiguitie; scarcitie, scantneße; poorenesse, meanenesse; lowlinesse; shortnesse, lowneße, youngnesse.

Petiteur: f. as Petitesse. Petition: f. A petition; suit, request, requirall, demaund.

Petitoire: m. A petition; clayme, demaund.

Petitoire: com. Petitorie; clayming, demaunding, requiring. Action petitoire. A Cloyme; a Writ of right, an action of demaund.

Petitose: f. The garbage of fowle; (an old word.)

Peton: m. A little foot; also, the slender staulke of a leafe, or of a fruit. Mon peton. My prettie springall, my gentle impe; (any such flattering, or dandling phrase, bestowed by nurses on their suckling boyes.)

Petoncle: m. A Cockle, or small Scallop.

Petonner. To pat, or tread downe the earth by often stepping, or trampling on it.

Petoucle. as Petoncle. Petrar: m. A wild Sparrow, leße then the tame one. ¶Orlean. Petrarquiser. To Petrarkise it, to write like a passionate louer.

Petreux. Os pet. The bone of the Temples; one of the eight bones whereof the skull consists.

Petrification: f. A petrification; a making stonie, a turning into stone.

Petrifié: m. ée: f. Made stonie, turned into stone.

Petrifier. To make stonie, to turne into stone.

Petrinal: m. A Petronell, or horsemans peece.

Petrir. Seeke Pestrir. Petrol: m. Petrole, & Petrolle: f. as Naphte. Petteler. as Peteler. Petulance: f. Petulancie, malapertnesse, impudencie, sawcinesse.

Petum: m. Tobacco. Petum femelle. English Tobacco; the right yellow Henbane; or a small kind of Nicotian. Petum masle. Nicotian, French Tobacco.

Peu. (A Participle of the verbe Paistre) fed, eaten, repasted, pastured.

Peu. (Of the Verbe Pouvoir) I'ay peu. I could, or might haue beene able.

Peu. (An Aduerbe of quantitie) little, small, scant, scarce, few; a pittance, modicum, small deale, slender companie, almost nothing, or no bodie. Peu à peu. See Petit à petit. Peu plus peu moins. Little more or leße, thereabouts. Peu s'en faut; &, à peu pres. Almost, wellnigh, verie neere, lacking but little, missing but narrowly, likelie to haue beene. Peu souvent. Seldome, rarely, not verie often. Homme de peu. A worthlesse, poore, or weake-spirited, fellow. C'est trop peu d'un. One is too few; or thats too few by one. Tant soit peu. But verie sleightly, neuer so little. Peu de chose ne fait qu'un peu de mal: Prov. A little thing does but a little harme. Peu à peu le loup mange l'oye: Prov. Bit after bit the Wolfe eates vp the Goose. Peu & paix est don de Dieu: Pro. A little with quietnesse is Gods owne gift. De peu de chose peu de prose: Pro. Little done soone deliuered, little acted quickly vttered. Qui peu seme peu prend: Prov. Of small seeding a small crop. Trois beaucoup, & trois peu destruisent l'homme: Pro. viz. To speake much, and know but little; to spend much, and haue but little; to presume much, and be but little.

Peucedane: m. Horse-strong, Hore-strange, Sow fennell, Sulpherwort.

Pevier. Canon pevier. A Cannon Peuier, or Perrier; See Canon.

Peuille. as Peulle.

Peulle: f. Before new money be deliuered out of the Mint, an Officer called L'Essayeur diuides a peece thereof into foure parts; one he giues to the Maister, a second vnto the Wardens of the Mint; the other two he keepes, and touches, or makes a triall of, one of them: Now each of these parts wrapt vp in a peece of paper, (specifying the quantitie, weight, allay, and day of deli-*