Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/850

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

Saphre. Looke Safre. Sapience: f. Sapience, wisedome, discretion, circumspection, warineße, knowledge of all things. Huile de sapience. Oyle drawne out of tiles, or bricks, which haue beene steeped in verie old oyle.

Sapin: m. A Firre tree. Sapin femelle. The Deale tree. Bois de Sapin. Deale planke, or Deale boords.

Sapine: f. An open tub, or vessell (of Firre wood, &c,) wherein bottles of wine are vsually set.

Sapinette: f. A groue, or wood, of Firre trees.

Sapineux: m. euse: f. Firrie, of Firre, full of Firre.

Sappé: m. ée: f. Digged, vndermined, opened, cut into or through, as a wall, at the foot.

Sappement: m. A digging of a wall, an vndermining, opening, or cutting into it, at the foot; hence also, a supplanting.

Sapper. To vndermine, dig into, open, or cut open (as a wall) at the foot; and hence also, to supplant.

Sappeur: m. An vnderminer, or miner.

Sapphir. Looke Saphir. Sappin: m. A Chiappin, or Spanish Pantofle; monstrous high-soled, and most vsed by women.

Saquer. Looke Sacquer. Saquerelle: f. A Docke for a horses traine.

Sarache: f. An Albanian fish verie like to th' Anchoua.

Sarazine. Looke Sarrasine. Sarbacane, or (which is better) Sarbataine: f. A long trunke to shoot in; also, the musicall Instrument called a Sagbut.

Sarcable: com. Weedable, fit to be weeded.

Sarcasme: m. A biting taunt, bitter ieast, cutting quip, nipping scoffe.

Sarcelle: f. The water-fowle called a Teale.

Sarclé: m. ée: f. Weeded; grubbed vp with a weeding forke.

Sarclement: m. A sarkling, weeding; a grubbing vp with a weeding forke.

Sarcler. To weed; to grub, or dig vp weeds.

Sarclet: m. A weeding hooke, or weeding forke; made somewhat like a grubbing, or dung, forke.

Sarcleur: m. A weeder.

Sarcloir: m. Looke Sarclet. Sarcocolle: f. A bitter Gumme which ißues from a thornie Persian plant; also, the Wind-rose, or bastard wild Poppie.

Sarcophange: m. A stone called Eat-flesh, because it consumes, in fortie dayes, the dead carkasses inclosed within it.

Sarcotique: com. Breeding new flesh.

Sarcueil: m. A coffin for a dead corps; Looke Cercueil. Sardaine: f. A Pilchard, or Sardine.

Sardanapalisme: f. Filthie, and effeminate sensualitie.

Sarde: f. A Pilchard; also, a flesh-coloured stone, thats easie to be grauen, and therefore much vsed in Seale-*rings.

Sardelle: f. The little fish called a Sardell, or Sardine.

Sardine. Looke Sardaine. Sardoine: m. The Sardonix; a stone which on th' one side resembles a mans naile, on th' other the Sarde. Sardonien. Ris sardonien. Looke Ris. Sarfoët: m. Looke Sarfouëtte. Sarfoüage: m. A grubbing, digging, or cutting vp of weeds.

Sarfouëtte: f. An Instrument, whose yron head, about a foot long, is forked on th' one side, & sharpe on th' other,

to grub, or cut vp weeds or noisome hearbs.

Sarfouïr. To grub, or cut vp weeds.

Sarge: f. The stuffe called Serge.

Sargette: f. A fine, or thinne Serge.

Sargon: m. The Gilthead, or Goldeney; as some hold; howsoeuer, it is a verie lecherous fish, and often changeth his mate.

Sargoter. To shog, ioult, shake, tosse, or thumpe; also, to swiue.

Sarin: m. A certaine water-hearbe, which hath a hard root necessarie for Smithes.

Sarisse. A long Speare, Launce, Pike, or Javelin, vsed by th' auncient Macedonians.

Sarlatan: m. Looke Charlatan. Sarment: m. The twig, or small branch of a vine, &c. Se brider de sarment. To bridle himselfe with a vine-sprig; to be so drunke that he cannot speake.

Sarmenteux: m. euse: f. Full of twigs, or small branches.

Sarmentin: m. ine: f. Of, or belonging to, a small vine branch. Dragme sarmentine. A draught, or cup, of wine.

Sarpe: f. An instrument somewhat resembling a little Bill, and vsed for the lopping of trees, and cutting of other small wood, wherof bauens, and fagots be made.

Sarpette: f. A vine-knife, hooked Gardeners knife, small hedging Bill. À pleine sarpette. La vigne qui est à pleine sarpette. Thats full of, or well furnished with, grapes.

Sarpillére: f. A Sarpliar; a peece of canuas, cloth, or other stuffe to wrap, or packe vp wares in.

Sarpilliere: f. The same.

Sarpillon. Looke Sarpette. Sarrabouïte. Looke Strabouïte: ¶Rab. Sarrasine: f. The hearbe Heartwort, or Birthwort; also, Sarasines Confound, or Comfrey.

Sarrasson: m. Fleetings, or hastie curds, scumd from the whey of a new-milke cheese, then thickened with a little milke, or the yolke of an egge, and boyled on a soft fire.

Sarre: f. A kind of small peece of Artillerie vsed in old time.

Sarrer. Looke Serrer. Sarriette: f. Sauorie, Summer Sauorie. Sarriette d'Angleterre. Winter Sauorie, Timbra, Time-hysop.

Sars: m. des sars. Chichlings, yellow wild Fitches.

Sart: m. Sea-mosse, Lungwort, Oistergreene.

Sarteau: m. The Bell-peare, or Gourd-peare.

Sartie: f. A Cocke-boat, or ship-boat; the skiffe belonging to a ship.

Sartre: m. A Tailor, or Botcher; a mender of old garments.

Sarvinien: m. A fruitfull white vine whose leafe is almost round.

Sas: m. A ranging siue, or searce. Au gros sas. Coursly; also, carelesly, sleightly, cursarily.

Sasle: com. Looke Sale. Saslir. Looke Salir. Sassé: m. ée: f. Searced, sifted, ranged, boulted.

Sassefique; or, Sassefrique. Looke Sassify. Sassement: m. A sifting, searcing, ranging, boulting.

Sasser. To sift, searce, range, boult. Sasse bonne farine sans trompe ne buccine: Prov. Boult thy fine meale, and eat good past, without report, or Trumpets blast.

Sasseur: m. A sifter, searcer, boulter of corne, &c.