Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/847

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Salidure: f. A little push, wheale, or powke; so called (at it first arising) in Languedoc. Saliere: f. A salt-seller, a table or trencher salt; also, a powdering house; also, the hollownesse, or hollow pit, betweene the blades of the shoulders; Looke Salliere. Saliette: f. Hearbe Sorrell, Sowre-docke, or Greene-*sauce.

Saligot: m. A slouen, or slouch: ¶Orleannois. Saligots: m. Saligots, water Caltrops, water Nuts.

Salin: m. as Trident; also, a garner for salt. Droict de Salin. as Gabelle de sel. Saline: f. A salt-pit, or salt-house; a place wherein salt is gotten, or made.

Salir. To foule, soyle, sullie, beray, begrime; pollute, make sluttish, defile, or fill with ordure.

Salisson: com. A slouen, or slut (at Tours.)

Salissure: f. A fouling, soyling, sullying, defiling, beraying, begriming.

Salival: m. ale: f. Spittlie, slimie.

Salivation: f. A continuall hauing of much spittle in the mouth; or, a drawing of humors to the mouth, and a deliuerie of them from thence in manner of spittle.

Salive: f. Spittle; also, a clammie foame, or iuyce; also, the slime of snailes. Table sans sel bouche sans salive: Prov. Appliable to any dull, or vnsauorie thing, which hath no power to excite th' appetite.

Saliver. To slauer; to be full of spittle, yeeld much spittle, make a clammie, or slimie foame.

Saliveux: m. euse: f. Spittlie, slauering, full of mouth-moisture; yeelding a clammie or slimie foame.

Saliviere: f. as Baverette à babillons. Salle: f. A Hall. Salle d'audience. Any Hall, or place, wherein a Soueraigne Court is kept. La grande Salle du Palais. The great Hall of the Palace; that wherin (as in ours at Westminster) most of the Judges doe sit. Avoir la salle. To be whipped in publicke, or (like a breeching boy of a Colledge) publickly in a Hall.

Salle: com. Looke Sale. Sallebrenaut: m. A filthie, shitten, stinking, or slouenlie scoundrell; a base, and beastlie companion.

Sallebreneux: m. euse: f. Most filthily berayed.

Salleté. Looke Saleté. Sallette: f. A little Hall.

Salli: m. ie: f. Fouled, soyled, sullied; berayed, begrimed, exceedingly slurried.

Salliere: f. as Saliere; also, the pit or hole ouer th' eye of a horse; or the bone wherein it is.

Sallir as Salir; or Saslir. Sallisseure: f. A fouling, soyling, beraying, begriming, defiling.

Salloir: m. A salting, or sowcing tub, or table.

Sallorge. A sellor, storehouse, or low roome, to keep salt in.

Salmandre: f. A Salamander; a spotted Lizard, or beast like a Lizard, which (as old Authors affirme) liues much in the fire; and either is not hurt by it, or within a while quenches it; but the truth is, that although she endure it better then any other beast, yet at length, or if she stay any while in it, it is not quenched by her, but shee consumed by it. Salmandre d'eau. The water Salamander; black-backed, red-bellied, and full of yellow spots.

Salmigondin: m. A Hachee; or meat made ordinarily of cold flesh, cut in little peeces, and stewed or boyled on a chafingdish, with crummes of bread, wine, veriuyce, vinegar, sliced Nutmeg, and Orange pills.

Salmille: f. The hearbe Cheruill.

Salmonde: f. Hearbe Auens, Bennet, or Blessed.

Salnitre. Salt-peter candied, or fined vnto the colour, & substance of white Sugar-candie.

Saloir: m. A powdering tub, or table.

Saloppe: com. A slouen, or slut: ¶Orleannois. Saloque. The South-east wind.

Salorge: f. A sellor, low roome, or storehouse, to lay salt in.

Salouër. Looke Saloir. Salpestre: m. Salt-peter.

Salpestré: m. ée: f. Made of, or mixed with, Salt-peter.

Salpestreux: m. euse: f. Full of Salt-peter.

Salpestrier: m. A Salt-peter-man, or Salt-peter-maker.

Salsature: f. Looke Salsitude. Salseparille: f. Th' Indian hearbe, or drug, Sassaparilla. Salsitif: m. iue: f. Salt, saltie, or salt-making.

Salsitude: f. Saltnesse, brackishnesse.

Salsugineux: m. euse: f. Saltie, or smacking of salt.

Saltereau. Looke Sautereau. Salüade: f. A salutation, or greeting; and particularly, a volley of great or small shot bestowed on a great person, or worthie friend.

Salvador: m. A Sauiour; (drawne from the Spanish.)

Salvage. Droict de Salvage. Looke Droict. Salvatelle: f. Th' outward branch of the shoulder veine, falling down, ouer the wrist, vnto the partitiō between the ring finger, and the little one.

Salvation: f. A bill, replie, or pleading, which maintains the truth of an account, the depositions of witneßes, or the goodnesse of a deed, reproached, or contradicted by another bill, &c.

Salubre: com. Wholesome, healthfull, whole, sound.

Salubrement. Wholesomely, healthfully.

Salubrité. Wholesomenesse, healthfulnesse, soundnesse, Saluë: f. A volley of shot giuen for a welcome to some great person, &c.

Salué: m. ée: f. Saluted, greeted; reuerenced.

Saluër. To salute, greet, all-haile, doe reuerence, make a courtesie, send commendations, giue the time of the day, vnto. Ils saluërent le promontoire de &c. They sayled, or paßed, by the Promontorie of &c.

Saluerne: f. A great carrousing, or drinking cup: ¶Rab. Saluëur: m. A saluter, a greeter.

Salure: f. A salting, powdering, pickling; a laying in brine; a seasoning, or corning with salt; also, brine, or pickle.

Salus. as Saluts; also, a certaine craftie sea-fish, which biteth away the bait, and meddleth not with the hooke.

Salut: m. Health, safetie, soundneße, good plight; also, saluation, safegard, preseruation; also, a greeting, salutation, commendation.

Salutaire: m. The health, preseruation, or safegard of.

Salutaire: com. Healthfull, wholesome, sound, whole; comfortable; profitable.

Salutairement. Healthfully, wholesomely; comfortably.

Saluta-libenter. vn sal. A cogging, flattering, or gleering mate; one that salutes euerie one (but cares for none) he meets.

Salutation: f. A salutation, greeting, or courtesie; a reuerencing; a commending himselfe vnto.

Saluts: m. An old French Crowne, or coyne, worth about 5 s. sterl.

Samarré. Looke Chamarré.