Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/939

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  Reverence Turquesque. A nod with the head.

Turquet. as Turguet. Turquie: f. Turkie. Bled de Turquie. Turkie corne, or Turkie wheat; of diuers kinds, and colours.

Turquin. as Couleur Turque (vnder Turc;) or Couleur Turquine (vnder Couleur;) also, a kind of dark-greene Pumpion. Turquois: m. oise: f. Turkish; whence, Arc Turquois. The Turkish Long-bow.

Turquoise: f. A Turqueis, or Turkish-stone.

Turrement: m. A violent shocke, ioult, or iurring, as of an Engine of batterie against a wall.

Turse. as Turcée. Tursie. as Turcie. Turturelle: f. A Turtledoue.

Turumber. An auncient Arabian word, signifying the finest sort of sugar.

Tusé: m. ée: f. Pounded, brayed, beaten, or bruised in a mortar.

Tute: f. A hole, or berrie made by a Conie.

Tutelaire: com. Tutelarie, garding, protecting, patronizing, defending.

Tutele: f. Wardship; gardianship, the custodie of a child vnder age; also, tuition, defence, protection, safe-*gard.

Tuteur: m. A Tutor, Gardian, Ouerseer.

Tuthie: f. Tutie; a medecinable stone, or dust, said to be the heauier foyle of Brasse, cleauing to the vpper sides, and tops of Brasse-melting houses: and such doe ordinarie Apothecaries passe away for Tutie; although the true Tutie be not heauie, but light and white like flocks of wooll, falling into dust as soone as it is touched; this is bred of the sparkles of brasen furnaces, whereinto store of the minerall Calamine, beaten to dust, hath been cast. Tuthie Alexandrine. The best kind of artificiall Calamine, tearmed by Phisitions, Botryitis. Tutoyer. To thou one.

Tutrice: f. A tutrix, or tuteresse; a defendresse, or gardianesse.

Tutsan: m. Tutsan, Parke-leaues; (an hearbe.)

Tutuyer. as Tutoyer. Tutye. Looke Tutie. Tuyau: m. A pipe, quill, cane, reed, canell. Tuyau de bled. A straw, or staulke of corne. Tuyau de mer. A red sea-worme found among rocks, inclosed in a white, round, and (on the outside) rugged pipe, or shell. Enter en tuyau. as Enter en canon. See Canon. Tyberiade: f. A Topographe; the modell, or draught of a place, called so of a booke of that name, composed by Bartholus the Lawyer, who was the first that graced his works with such figures.

Tygre. Looke Tigre. Tymbale. A Timbrell; or, a little brasen drumme to daunce by. ¶Langued. Tymbon. A kind of brasen drumme.

Tymbre, & Tymbré. Looke Timbre, & Timbré. Tymbrée: f. Fish-Mint, water-Mint, brooke-Mint.

Tympan: m. A Timpan, or Timbrell; also, a Taber; also, the Gable-end of a house; also, a Printers Timpane; that whereon he layes the sheet, or leafe thats to be printed; also, the great wheele of a Crane; also, a Mill-wheele that taketh, and yeeldeth water in turning.
  Tympan d'une campanelle. The broad-end of a Campanell.

  Tympan dentelée. The cog-wheele of a Mill.

Tympane. Looke Tympanne. Tympaner. To play on a Timpan, Timbrell, or Taber.

Tympaniser. as Tympaner; also, to defame, slaunder, traduce.

Tympaniste: m. A Timpanist; a player on a Timpan, &c; also, one that hath a Timpanie. ¶Rab. Tympanne: m. The pannell, or flat square on the top, or head of a pillar.

Tyn. The hearbe Time.

Tyne. Looke Tine. Typhaine: f. The Epiphanie, or Twelfth day in Christmas.

Typhe. Water-Torch, Cats-tayle, Reed Mace, Ditch Downe, the marsh beetle or pestle.

Typher. Looke Tiffer. Typholope. A kind of hard-skinned Blind-worme, or Slow-worme, which is not verie venomous.

Typhones. Great, or violent whirlewinds. ¶Rab. Tyran: m. A Tirant; a cruell King, Lord, Ruler; a violent Gouernor.

Tyranneau: m. A pettie Tyrant.

Tyrannie: f. Tyrannie, Lorldlie crueltie, a violent or bloudie Gouernment.

Tyranniquement. Tyrannously, cruelly, bloudily.

Tyrannizer. To tyrannize, or play the Tyrant.

Tyrasser. Looke Tirasser. Tyrepet: m. A great farter. ¶Rab. Tyrer. Looke Tirer. Tyromantie: f. Diuination by a Cheese.

Tyrouër: m. Js, in a Violin, or small Fiddle, the flat peece behind the bridge whereto the strings be fastened; also, as Tirouër. Tyrse. The dart, or iauelin of Bacchus. Tyrsigere: com. Juie-bearing, or decked with Juie.


V

Va. (Is the second Person of the Jmperatiue Mood of the Verbe Aller) goe, goe thy wayes, get hence, get thee gone; also (the third Person of the Present tense of the Indicatiue Mood; whence, Il va;) he goes, wends, walkes on; Tis also vsed sometimes as a Substantiue; whence; Vn va cy va là. One that is sent vp and downe on errands. Vn va par tout. The same; also, a quicke or nimble fellow; one that dispatches his worke apace; one that soone rids way.

Vacabons: m. Vagabonds, rogues.

Vacant: m. The reuenue of a Benefice during vacancie.

Vacant: m. ante: f. Vacant, emptie, void; at leisure; without vse, or imployment; without owner; whence; Biens vacans. Wayfes, strayes; a purse, or treasure found; any land, or thing, which is without owner.

Vacarme: f. A battaile, or fight; and, the rustling noyse made by armor, or armed men, in a battaile; also, a suddaine inuasion or assault, or the boisterous hurrie it goes with; also, a tumultuous garboyle, hurlyburlie, sturre, coyle.

Vacation: f. A vacation, vacancie, leisure, ceasing from labor; also, a trade, art, handicraft, profession, vocation, calling.

Vache: f. A Cow; also, Neats-leather; also, a heape of new-made salt.