Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/934

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Trituration: f. A crumming, crumbling, breaking, or grinding small.

Trituré: m. ée: f. Crummed, crumbled, broken, or ground small.

Triturer. To crumme, crumble, breake, or grind small.

Trivial: m. ale: f. Triuiall, common, homelie, ordinarie, vsuall, sleight, of small worth. Yeux triviaux. Eyes that be intentiue, or earnestly cast, three or foure seuerall wayes at once.

Trivialitez: f. Triuialities; triuiall, sleight, common, homelie, ordinarie matters.

Triule. as Trieule. Troc. Looke Troq. Trocanters: m. Two processes, or bunches towards the top of the thigh-bone; a great one (and the greatest of the whole bodie) standing outward; a lesse, and lower, standing inward.

Troché. whence, Teste de cerf trochée. Troched, or whose top is diuided into three or foure small branches.

Trochée: f. A cluster of apples, &c; a bunch of nuts, &c, growing close together vpon one bough.

Trochelle: f. A certaine instrument of torture vsed in the Jnquisition-house.

Trochet: m. as Trochée; also, a kind of small, white, and sweet apple.

Trocheure: f. The troching on the top of a Deeres head; or, the top troched; as in Troché. Trochile: m. A Wrenne; also, a little water-fowle which vsually picketh the teeth of Crocodiles; also, a little wreathed band, or member in Pillars.

Trochisque: m. A Trochiske, or Trosque; a little rundle, or cake, whereinto diuers medicinable things be reduced, the better to be kept, and the readier to be vsed.

Trochisqué: m. ée: f. Made like, or into, a Trochiske.

Trocisque. as Trochisque; also, a staulke.

Trocisqué: m. ée: f. Reduced, or made into the forme of a Trochiske.

Troesne: m. Priuet, Primprint.

Trofée. Looke Trophée. Trognic: m. ique: f. Scoffing, mocking, flowting, deriding.

Trognon: m. The stocke, stump, or trunke of a (branchlesse) tree.

Troignon. as Trognon; also, the core within fruit.

Trois. Three. Monsieur de trois au boisseau, ou de trois à vne espée. Looke Monsieur. Secret de trois secret de tous: Prov. As good let all, as three, men know a thing.

Troisiesme. The third.

Trokalazou. Looke Proschalazon. ¶Rab. Troller. Hounds to trowle, raunge, or hunt out of order.

Trollerie: f. A trowling, or disordered raunging, a hunting out of order.

Trombe: f. A round and hollow ball of wood, hauing a peake like a casting-top, and making a great noise when it is cast as a top.

Tromble: f. The Cramp-fish, tearmed otherwise Torpille.

Trompe: f. A Trump, or Trumpet; also, a writhen, and brazen Hunters horne; also, a top; also, the shell-fish called, a sea-Top; also, the snowt of an Elephant; also, the pump of a ship; also, a closet, or such a like roome, built out of a wall with a hanging bottome like th' end of a trūpet.
  Il n'a pas le fouët pour mener cette trompe. He is too weake for such a wench.
  Il y a plus de trompeurs que de trompes: Pro. Looke Trompeur.

  Sasse bonne farine sans trompe, ne bucine: Prov. Enioy thine owne good things without much talking of them.

Trompé: m. ée: f. Deceiued, cousened, beguiled, cheated, circumuented, ouerraught.

Tromper. To cousen, deceiue, beguile, delude, circumuent, cheat, ouerreach. Tromper vn corbeau à bouche beante. To beguile or depriue a greedie fellow of a thing which he gaped for; or (much more properly) to bring him into a fooles Paradice; and, by commending, to get from, him that, which otherwise he would not, or in discretion he should not, by any meanes haue parted with. Qui d'autruy tromper se met en peine, souvent luy en advient la peine: Pro. Looke Peine. Tromperie: f. A craft, wile, fraud, fallacie, deceit, cousenage, delusion, circumuention, ouerreaching, imposture, sophistication, tricke of legerdemain.

Trompeter. To trumpet, or sound a Trumpet.

Trompeteur: m. A Trumpetter.

Trompette: m. as Trompeteur. Trompette: f. A Trumpet; also, the Needle-fish, Garre-fish, Horne-beake, Horne-fish, or Piper-fish; tearmed thus, because her beake doth somewhat resemble a Trumpet. Il est bon cheval de trompette. He feares no noise, big words affright him not. À pain, & oignon trompette ne clairon: Pro. Warre is seldome heard of in bare, and barren places; poore men may, if they list, liue quietly, and peaceably at home.

Trompetté: m. ée: f. Trumpetted, or noised abroad; published, or proclaymed with sound of Trumpets.

Trompetteur: m. A Trumpetter.

Trompeur: m. A deceiuer, beguiler, cousener, cheater, conycatcher, fraudulent dealer. À trompeur trompeur & demy: Prov. Applyable vnto a knaue, ouer-raught, or ouer-matched by a knaue. Il y a plus de trompeurs que de trompes: Pro. The world is fuller of trumperie then of trumpetting.

Trompeusement. Deceitfully, couseningly, cautelously, fraudulently.

Tron: m. A peece of a thing; or, as Tronc. Tronc: m. The trunke, stocke, stemme, bulke, or bodie of a tree, &c, without the boughes; also, a trunke, or headlesse bodie of man or beast; also, the poore-mans box in Churches; also, the Boat called a Lighter.

Troncation: f. A truncation, trunking, mutilation, cutting off.

Tronche: f. A great peece of timber; or, as Tronc. Tronché: m. ée: f. Stocked, growne a stocke, or in the stocke.

Troncher. To stock, or yeeld a stock, or grow in the stock, as a tree. Troncher les grains. Many staulks, or eares to spring from one root of corne.

Tronchet: m. A truncheon; a little trunke, stocke, or stemme.

Tronchou: m. A certaine blew-backt, siluer-bellied, and smooth-skind flat fish, without skales.

Troncir. To cut or breake off, or in two, or into peeces.

Tronçonné: m. ée: f. Trunked; lopped, or cut off; made headleße, branchlesse, memberlesse; mutilated, maymed.

Tronçonnement: m. A trunking; lopping, cutting off; a making headleße, branchlesse, memberlesse; a mutilating, or mayming.