Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/280

 Dehait: m. itte: f. Merrie, pleasant, iocond, blithe, lustie, frolicke.

Dehaité. as Deshaité. Ill at ease.

Dehalé: m. ée: f. Leane, meagar, skraggie, disfigured, ouglie, or illfauoured, by extreame leanenesse.

Dehayté: m. ée: f. Distasted, or loathed as meat; also, out of tune, ill at ease.

Dehayter. To distast, or loath meat; to be out of tune, ill at ease.

Dehinch. Away hence; Allem. ¶Rab. Dehonté: m. ée: f. Shamelesse, impudent, brasen-faced.

Dehors. Without, abroad, out of, on the outside of.  De dehors. From abroad, from forraine places.  Dedans, ou dehors. Fast, or loose (a Iuglers tearme.)  Par dehors. Outward, without, on the outside.

Dehotté: m. ée: f. Drawne out of the mire.

Dehotter. To draw (as a fast-sticking coach &c) out of the mire.

Dehousé: m. ée: f. Dispatched, rid out of the way; also, vnbooted, or whose boots are pulled off.

Dehoussé: m. ée: f. Vnfootclothed; vncouered; also, vnrugged, or made low napped, as new cloth, with the Teazell.

Deiect: m. iecte: f. as Deiecté. Deiecté: m. ée: f. Deiected, abased, brought low, cast downe; also, repelled, reiected, thrust from with contumelie or contempt.

Deiectement: m. A deiecting, abiecting, bringing low; also, a contemptible reiection, contumelious repulse.  Se Dejecter. To stand on tearmes; or, proudly to bestirre himselfe. ¶Nicot. Deïfication: f. A deifying.

Deïfié: m. ée: f. Deified, made a god.

Deïfier. To deifie, to make a god of.

Deillavier. To starue, to bereaue of life.

Dejoindre. as Desjoindre. Deité: f. The deitie, or godhead.

Delà. Beyond, ouer, on the further or other, side of.  Par deça, & par delà. On this side and that, on both sides, euerie way.  Vingt escus, & par delà. Twentie crownes and better; and more; and aboue.

Delabré: m. ée: f. Vnbraced, vnloosed, vntrussed; also, ragged, torne, tattered.

Delacher. as Deslacher. To loosse, discharge, let goe, let fly.

Delai. as Delay. Delaissé: m. ée: f. Forsaken, abandoned, left or cast off; relinquished, or giuen ouer; also, forgotten, ouerslipped, neglected, or left out, when good was t'haue bene done; also, destitute, forlorne, or left alone; also, deuoid of, or left without.  Toutes autres choses delaissées. All other things layed apart, or set aside.

Delaissement: m. A forsaking, abandoning, leauing, or casting of; relinquishing, or giuing ouer; also, a forgetting, ouerslipping, neglecting, or leauing out; also, a depriuing of, or leauing without; also, a destituting, or leauing alone; or (passiuely, as in the two next phrases) a being destitute, or left alone. Delaissement d'amis. The wretched, or succourlesse estate of one that hath not a friend left to helpe him. Delaissement d'enfans. The forlorn, or pitifull estate of Orphans, left to looke vnto, or shift for, themselues. Delaissement de raison. A defection, declining; reuolting, or swaruing, from reason.

Delaisser. To forsake, abandon, leaue, or cast of; relinquish, or giue ouer; to destitute, leaue alone, or without; also, to ouerslip, ouerpasse, neglect, or leaue out (when good may be done;) also, to swarue, reuolt, or decline, from.

Delateur: m. A Promooter, Informer, Complainer, Pick-*thanke, Tell-tale, or Tale-bearer; (properly such a one, as either in loue vnto Iustice and the State, or in hope of reward or gaine, prosecutes offendors, or publishes Concealements, at his owne charge.)

Delation: f. An Information; or bill of Complaint exhibited, and followed by an Informer; also, a priuate accusation, or tale framed against.

Delavé: m. ée: f. Washed away.

Delay: m. A delay; stay, lingering, protraction, tergiuersation, deferring, or driuing off; a pause, a space, an intermission; also (in Law) a day giuen, for apparance; or for the bringing in, or amending of, a Plea, &c; and hence;  Delay peremptoire. A peremptorie day; the last of delayes.  Injure de delay. A wrong so hainous, that a suddaine reuenge will not serue, but opportunitie must be waited for the quitting of it in a more cruell manner.  Paroles de delay. (Of the same sence; or) Reproches, or Slanders in the highest degree; as the tearme of Traytor, Murtherer, Church-robber; which to prooue, were enough to ruine, or for euer to disgrace, a man.

Delayant. Delaying, deferring; also, allaying, or macerating.

Delayé: m. ée: f. Delayed, deferred, suspended, prolonged, protracted; driuen, shifted, or put off; also, allayed, or softened, by steeping; also, made thin.

Delayement: m. A delaying, deferring, protracting, pawsing, suspending; also, a macerating, or allaying.

Delayer. To delay, deferre, procrastinate, protract, suspend, prolong; driue, put, or shift off from day to day; to pawse, linger, wiredraw it, or draw out in length; also, to macerate, allay, or soften, by steeping, &c; also, to make thin.

Delayeur: m. A delayer, deferrer, protractor, prolonger, lingerer, wiredrawer.

Delectable: com. Delectable, delightfull; pleasant, pleasing.

Delectation: f. Delectation, delight, pleasure, oblectatiō.

Delecter. To delight, please, ioy; make sport, yeeld pleasure, giue contentment, vnto.

Delegation: f. A delegation; a chusing for, or appointment vnto, a charge, &c.

Delegué: m. ée: f. Delegated, appointed, assigned, or chosen, vnto a charge, &c.

Deleguer. To assigne, commit, or appoint vnto an office, charge, or commission; to chuse, or delegate vnto a businesse, or for a message.

Les Deleguez. The Delegates; Iudges appointed, or chosen to decide, and determine of certaine matters.

Deleuce. in stead of d'ellend. Of the colour of an Elk. ¶Rab. Delez. Hard by. (vieil mot.) Deliberatif: m. iue: f. Deliberatiue; determinatiue.

Deliberation. A deliberation, consultation, thinking, aduising; also, a determination vpon former aduisement.

Deliberé: m. ée: f. Deliberated, consulted, aduised of; also, determined, concluded, resolued on; also, resolute, couragious, readie, cheerfull, in the middest of dangers; hartie; merrie, iocond, of a pleasant humor.