Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/881

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Souppous. Looke Supposts. Souquenie: f. A Canuas Jacket, frocke, or Gaberdine; such a one as our Porters weare.

Source: f. A source; head, originall, beginning, of; a spring, well-head, well-spring; a seminarie; race, of-*spring.

Sourcé: m. ée: f. Sourced, sprung or begun from; also, originally drawne from, taken from the source of.

Sourcens; &, Sourcensier. Looke Surcens; &, Surcensier. Sourcer. To source, to spring; to begin; to ißue, or draw it originall from.

Sourchelons: m. The Frounce; a Hawkes disease.

Sourcicle. The Ninmurder; a yellowish, and verie small bird.

Sourcier: m. A Sorcerer.

Sourcil: m. An eye-brow; also, the ridge of haire growing thereon; also, a frowning, surlie, or sowre countenance.

Sourcilier: m. ere: f. Of, or on, the eye-browes.

Sourciller. To moue the eye-browes vp and downe.

Sourcilles: f. The eye-browes.

Sourcilleux: m. euse: f. Hauing verie great eye-brows; also, frowning, or looking sowrely on it; surlie, or proud of countenance; also, raised, aduanced, or lift vp on high.

Sourd: m. The Salamander.

Sourd: m. sourde: f. Deafe, hard of hearing, or, that cannot heare; also, listlesse, vnattentiue, heedlesse; also, dumme, without dinne or noise; (whence, in moist weather, they say that a Tennis-court is sourd;) and solide, or without sound, as a full bodie, or vessell well filled; also, dull, insensible, vnsauorie; also, darke, priuie, priuate, secret, vnder-hand. Aspic sourd. (The Aspe, sayes Gesner, by reason of her exceeding drought is accounted deafe; but that one Aspe is deafer then another I read not.) Lanterne sourde. A theeues Lanterne; the blacke Lanterne of yron which theeues, & other priuate night-*walkers vse to carrie about them. Nombre sourd. A surd number; a number whereof a perfect square cannot be made. Teincture sourde. The coursest kind of dying, with nought but hearbes. Sourd comme vn tapis. As deafe as a doore-nayle (say we.) Il n'est point de pire sourd que celuy qui ne veut ouïr: Prov. No man's worse deafe then he that will not heare.

Sourdant. Springing vp, rising or arising, from.

Sourdastre: com. Deafish, thicke of hearing.

Sourdault. Somewhat deafe, thicke of hearing.

Sourdement: m. A rising, arising, springing vp, appea-pearing out of.

Sourdement. Deafely; also, vnattentiuely; also, priuately, vnder-hand, in huggermugger, without any din or noise; also, dully, insensibly.

Sourdent: m. The stumpe of a broken tooth.

Sourdesse: f. Deafenesse.

Sourdeté: f. The same.

Sourdin: m. ine: f. Deafish, thicke of hearing.

Sourdine: f. A Sourdet; the little pipe, or tenon put into the mouth of a Trumpet, to make it sound low; also, a Sordine, or a kind of hoarse, or low-sounding Trumpet. À la sourdine. Priuately, secretly, closely, without much dinne, or noise.

Sourdise: f. Deafenesse.

Sourdon: m. A kind of little shell-fish.

Sourdoyant. Rising, issuing, springing out or vp; mounting, arising, apearing aboue; also, raising.

Sourdre. To rise, issue, spring, boyle, come, out or vp; to mount, arise, ascend, appeare, or shew it selfe aboue; also, to raise, or put vp; whence they say when a Hawke is a wing, or lyes for game, Qu'on luy sourde des oiseaux. Souretier: m. A Rat-catcher; a Mouser, or catcher of Mice.

Sourge. Laine S. New shorne, vnwashed, or greasie wooll; wooll that is yet full of it owne grease.

Sourgeon: m. The young shoot, or tender and vp-shooting plant of a tree; also, the spring of a fountaine; or the rising, boyling, or spouting vp of water in a spring.

Souriceau: m. A little, or young Mouse.

Souricier: m. A Mouser, or Mouse-catcher.

Souricier: m. ere: f. Of Mice; whence; Vermine souriciere; Mice.

Souriciere: f. A Mousetrap.

Sourien: m. enne: f. Mousing; louing Mice; hunting after Mice.

Souris: f. A Mouse; also, the sinewie brawne of th' arms; also, an Engine whereby a draw-bridge, downe, is hindered from being pulled vp againe. Souris araigneuse. A shrew Mouse. Les souris du Palais. Aduocates, Counsellors, Pleaders, Pettifoggers. Oreille de souris. The hearbe Pilosella, or Mouse-eare, &c; Looke Oreille. Queuë de souris. Mouse-taile, Bloud-strange. La souris qui n'a qu'une entrée est incontinent happée: &, Tost attrapée est la souris qui n'a pour gis*te qu'un pertuis: Prov. (So ill a Protector is Improuidence.) De grand desseing vne souris: Prov. (as the Latine Parturiunt montes &c;) All that mountaine proues but a molehill.

Sourisseau: m. A little or young Mouse.

Sourisson. The same.

Sourte. Looke Soutte. Sous. Vnder, beneath, at the bottome of. Sous terre. Vnder-hand, priuily, in huggermugger. Faire tout sous soy. A child to beray himselfe.

Sousbarbe: f. as Soubarbe; also, the throat-band of a bridle. Endurer vne sousbarbe. To indure an iniurie.

Sousbride: f. as Sousbarbe, in the later sence; also, as Soubride. Souschambriere: f. A kitchin wench, or drudge to a house.

Souschanter. To sing vnder, to hold the base, or ground vnto; or as Soubschanter. Sousclavier: m. ere: f. Vnder the Kannell bone. Artere sousclaviere. The ascendant branch of the great Arterie. Muscle sousclavier. One of the muskles which, in the fetching of breath, dilate, and stretch out, the breast. Veine sousclaviere. Looke Veine. Souscoeur: m. The Pericardium, or thinne skin wherby the whole heart is couered.

Sousgorge d'une bride. The throat-thong, or throat-band of a bridle.

Sousgreve: f. The lesse bone of the leg; also, the calfe of the leg.

Souslevement, & Souslever. Look Soublevement, & Soublever.

Souspape: f. as Soupape.