Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/728

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  Piloselle grande. Great Mouse-eare; beares a yellow flower. Piloselle petite. Small Mouse-eare, or broad-leaued Mouse-eare, hath also, a yellow flower; but another kind of this hearbe is called blew Mouse-eare, of the colour of it flower, and is like ynough to be Fuschius his little Mouse-eare.

Pilot: m. A Pilot, or Steeresman; hee that directs the course of a ship; also, a little (footmans) Javelin.

Pilotage: m. Pilotisme; th' Office, or Art of a Pilot; the the skillfull guiding, or conduction of a ship; also, as Pillotage. Piloter. as Pilloter; also, as Pilotier. Piloti: m. A Commaunder, or Water-sledge; the instrument wherewith piles are driuen downe; also, a piling.

Pilotier. To play the Pilot; and, to sound the depth of waters with a line, and plummet.

Pilotis. as Piloti. Pilotisé: m. ée: f. Piled; founded on, or vnderset with, piles; vnderlayed, vnderpropped, supported.

Pilotiser. To pile, or strengthen with piles; to make a foundation of piles; also, to support, vnderlay, vnder-*set, vnderprop.

Pilule: f. A (Physicall) pill; also, a small ball, or bowle.

Pilure: f. A pill; whence; Vne pilure formentine vne, dragme sarmentine, & la iournée d'une geline, est la meilleure medecine: Prov. A manchet, cup of wine, and hennes dayes taske, is the best Physicke a sicke man can aske.

Pimard: m. A Heighaw, or Wood-pecker.

Pimbesche: f. A wilie queane, subtile wench, cunning drab; one that can finely execute her Mistreßes knauish deuises.

Piment: m. Oake of Jerusalem, or Oake of Paradise; (an hearbe;) also, a kind of wholesome peare.

Pimente: f. Spurge Oliue, Widow waile; (a shrub.)

Pimer. To quinch, crawle, moue, stirre.

Pimpant: m. ante: f. Spruce, compt, picked, neat, gay, fine, trimme.

Pimpé: m. ée: f. Sprucified, finified; curiously pranked, comptly tricked vp.

Pimpenauder. To pranke, trimme, tricke vp.

Pimpenelle. as Pimpinelle. Pimper. To sprucifie, or finifie it; curiously to pranke, trimme, or tricke vp himselfe.

Pimperneau: m. A grig, scaffling, spitchcocke, fawson Eele.

Pimpernelle: f. Burnet; See Pimpinelle. Pimpinelle: f. Burnet. Pimpinelle grande. Great, or wild Burnet. Pimpinelle petite. Garden Burnet. Pimpinelle Saxifrage. Burnet Saxifrage, great Saxifrage. Grosse Pimpinelle. Great Pimpinell; or, great Saxifrage.

Pimpompet. A kind of Game wherein three hit each other on the bumme with one of their feet.

Pimpreneau: m. as Pimperneau; also, a knaue, rascall, varlet, scoundrell.

Pimprenelle. as Pimpernelle.

Pin: m. A Pine tree.
  Pin aquatic. Female Knot-grasse; (a water hearbe.)
  Pin marin. The sea Pine; of two kinds, a great, and a little one; and both wild ones.
  Pin de montaigne. The mountaine (wild) Pine.
  Pin sauvage. The wild Pine; is properly diuided into two kinds; viz. The Mountaine, and Sea, Pine.

Pinacle: m. A Pinacle; a Spire.

Pinard: m. An exceeding small peece of money.

Pinart. The same; also, such a title as is our fellow, &c; whence, le pinart rencontra frere Adam, &c; the fellow met Frier Adam, &c.

Pinasse: f. The Pitch-tree; also, a Pinnace.

Pinastre: m. The wild Pine tree.

Pinatelle: f. A copper coyne hauing some small quantitie of siluer in it, and worth about fiue Liards. Pinatellier: m. A coyner of Pinatelles. Pinates à feu. See Pignates. Pinaux. The name of a kind of Grapes.

Pince: f. A croe, great barre, or leauer of yron; also, a Pincer; also, a Pinke; also, the view, or footing of a Deere; and (more generally) the tip, or edge of the bottome of a beasts hoofe; that which in treading first touches the ground.

Pincé: m. ée: f. Pinched, nipped, or twitched.

Pinceau: m. A Pensill; also, a Whitelimers Brush. Pinceau de mer. A shellie reed, or thing like a reed, which at th' one end stickes vnto rocks, at th' other puts out, sometimes, a fishie substance, (wherof it is full) and then resembles a Pensill.

Pince-maille. Seeke Pinse-maille. Pincement: m. A pinching, nipping, twitching.

Pincer. To pinch, nip, twitch (with the fingers, &c.) Pincer sans rire. Looke Rire. Pincerfi, & Pincervin: m. The Linden tree: ¶Provençail. Pinces: f. A paire of Pincers; also, Pinke (flowers.)

Pinceter. To pinch thicke; to nip, or twitch often; also, to touch a Lute, &c, nimbly; also, to pull off haires, or moats, with small Pincers.

Pinche: f. as Pine (in the later sence.)

Pinchons. in stead of Piochons: ¶Rab. Pinçotter. To pinch, or nip, often.

Pindariser. To affect in speech; or to speak nicely, sprucely, curiously; also, to speake shrilly, or vehemently, as one thats loath his Auditorie should loose a word by him.

Pine. as Quille; A Kayle; also, a pricke, member, bable.

Pineau: m. The seed, or kernell of a Grape; also, a kind of white, and longish grape; whereof; Vin pineau. Excellent strong wine.

Pinet: m. Hogs Fennell, sow Fennell, Sulphurewort, Brimstonwort, Horestrong, or Horestrange.

Pinette: f. A kind of Cyder made of water mingled with the iuyce of crabs, or wild apples; also, a groue, or wood of Pine-apples.

Pineux: m. euse: f. Of or belonging to, also, full of, Pine-trees.

Pinge: f. A pillocke, member, bable, &c.

Pingres. aux p. A (womanish) play with Ivorie balls.

Pinguereaux. A kind of sweet Cherries.

Pinhadar: m. A young, or little wild Pine.

Pinier: m. The Rosen tree; or any other, whose fruit resembles a Pine-apple; as the great Cedar, Cypresse, &c.

Piniolat. as Pignolat. Pinne: f. The shell-fish called a Naker; also, the finne of a fish; also, the broad, and gristlie part of the eare; also, as Pinge. Pinne du nez. The gristle of the nose; the bone wherby the nosethrills are diuided.

Pinneux: m. euse: f. Finnie, full of finnes.

Pinnophylace: f. A kind of little Sea-fish.

Pinnothere. A little Shell-fish, of the kind of Shrimpes.