Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/287

 take her maidenhead.

Depucellé. as Depucelé. Depuis. Since, or sithence.

Depuration: f. A depuration; purging, purifying, or clarifying.

Depuré. Purged, cleered, purified, clarified.

Depurer. To purge, cleere, purifie, clarifie.

Depurgatoire: com. Depurgatorie; purging.

Deputé: m. A Deputie; (properly, one thats imployed by subiects vnto their Prince.)

Deputé: m. ée: f. Deputed, ordained, appointed, assigned.

Deputer. To depute, appoint, ordaine, assigne.

Dequoy: m. (Substantiuely) stuffe, substance, where-*withall.

Dequoy. (Adverb.) Whereto, wherefore, to what end; as, Dequoy me sert cela?'' wherto doth that serue me? what vse haue I of that? or, what am I the better for it?''  Il y a bien dequoy. There is good cause for it.

Derbro: m. A kind of small-mouthed, blew-backt, and white-bellied Sea-fish.

Derceau. A little Dace, or Dare-fish: ¶Rab. Derechef. Againe, moreouer; once, or ouer, againe.

Deregler. Looke Se Desreigler. Dereté. Disintangled, vnsnared, got out of the net.

Deridé: m. ée: f. Smoothed, vnwrinkled, planed, made plaine; also, loossened, slackened, vnstiffened.

Derider. To smooth, plane, or make plaine a thing that had wrinkles; or as in;  Derider les cordes, les voiles; &c; To loossen, vnstiffen, or slacken the tackling, sailes, &c.

Deris: m. A mocke, flout, gibe, derision.

Derision: f. Derision, mockerie, flouting, scoffing.

Derivé: m. ée: f. Deriued, or drawne from; also, drayned.

Deriver. To deriue; or draw from; also, to draine, or draw drie.

Derme: m. The (true) skin which couers the extreame parts of the bodie.

Derne: m. as Darne; A slice; a broad and thin peece, or partition of. Dernier: m. ere: f. The last, hindmost; vttermost, farthest, or furthermost; also, the later, or second, in ranke, or place.  Au dernier. Finally, at the last cast.  Maudissant le dernier. ''Cursing the last; viz. striuing to run (away) with the formost.''  Le dernier le loup le mange: Prov. The lag, (or laziest) of a flocke is preyed on.  Le dernier venu est le mieux aimé: Prov. He that came last is best beloued; the newest friend, &c, most trusted, best vsed.  Les derniers venus ferment les portes: Prov. The last commer shuts the doore; strikes vp the bargaine; ends the businesse.  Les derniers venus sont les Maistres: Prov. The last commers get the maisterie, ouerrule the rest, rule the roast.  Vn iour iuge de l'autre, & le dernier iuge de tous: Prov. One day rules another, but the last ouerrules all.

Dernierain: m. aine: f. Late, or lateward; verie backward; which is long in comming, or late before it bee ripe.

Dernierement. Lately, or, not long agoe.

Deroché: m. ée: f. Pulled, or fallen, from a rocke; Looke Desroché. Derogant. Looke Derogeant. Derogation: f. A derogation; a disabling, or disparaging of; a diminution; abrogation, or abolishment of part of.

Derogatoire: m. A derogatorie, or act of derogation, or of disparagement.

Derogatoire: com. Derogatorie; disparaging, derogating from; also, diminishing; abrogating, or abolishing part of.

Derogé: m. ée: f. Disparaged, or derogated from; disabled; also, abrogated, or abolished in part.

Derogeant. Derogating from; disparaging; disabling; impairing; abrogating, or abolishing part of.

Deroger. To derogate from; to disparage; to disable, or impaire; to abrogate a peece, abolish a part, of.

Deroguer. as Deroger. Derompement: m. A breaking, or bursting in peeces; a riuing asunder.  Derompement de maisons. A rasing, ouerthrowing, pulling, or breaking downe of houses.

Derompre. To burst, or breake in peeces; to riue or teare asunder; to ouerthrow, rase, ruine, breake downe.

Derompu: m. uë: f. Burst, or broken, in peeces; riuen, or torne, asunder; full of breaches; broken downe.

Deroute: f. A rout, a defeature, or flight of men.

Derrain. as Deriner. The last: ¶Pic. Derrainier. The same.

Derrée. as Denrée; Ware, &c.

Derrenier. See Dernier. Derrider. To smooth, plane, vnwrinkle, stretch out.  Derrider les voiles. To loossen, or slacken the sayles; a Mariners phrase.

Derriere. (Substantiuely; as) le derriere de. The hinder part, backe part, or backe side of.  Courir sur le derriere. A horse to gallop all vpon his hinder parts.

Derriere. (An Aduerbe of Place;) Behind, backward, on the backe-side, or backe-part of.  Au devant par derriere. The wrong way to the wood; round about next way, and in at further doore; Looke Devant. Gaigner le devant par derriere. See Devant; or Gaigner. Cheval qui porte derriere. A double gelding, a horse that will carrie double.

Ders: m. A cloath of State, hanging full ouer, and falling low behind, a Soueraigne Princes chaire of Estate.

Derselet: m. A little square Canopie, or cloath of Estate.

Dertre. as Dartre; A tetter, or ring-worme. Des. From, euen from, since.  Des à present. Forthwith, incontinently, from this verie time forword.  Des que i'auray disné; As soone as euer I haue dined.

Desabillé: m. ée: f. vncloathed, vndressed, vnarrayed.

Desabiller: m. A Ladies cushion-cloth.

Desabiller. To vncloath, vndresse, vnray, put off habilements.

Desabusé: m. ée: f. Disabused; vnblinded; deliuered of errors, rid from abuses.

Desabuser. To disabuse, to rid from abuses.

Desaccointé: m. ée: f. Disacquainted; growne out of acquaintance with; made strange vnto.

Desaccointer. To disacquaint; to breake; or dissolue