Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/293

 Deschute: f. A lapse or fall.

Descigler. Looke Dessiller. Descimenter. Cette Muraille se descimente. This wall growes vnmortered, or hath worne out it morter.

Desciré; Descirer: &c; as Deschiré; Deschirer; &c. Desclaveté: m. ée: f. Dismounted, vnlocked, or taken, as a cannon from it carriage.

Desclaueter vn Canon. To dismount a cannon; (properly to vnlocke the carriage thereof.)

Descliquer. To let goe, let flye; rap out: See Decliquer. Desclorre. To disparke, vnclose; disinclose, pull downe hedges, or inclosures.

Desclos: m. ose: f. Disparked, vnclosed, layed open, disinclosed.  Fleur desclose. A flower thats spred, full blowen, fully bloomed.  Secret desclos. disclosed, reuealed, bewrayed,.

Descloüé: m. ée: f. Vnnayled, vncloyed.

Desclouër. To vnnayle, or vncloy; to loosse, pull off, drawe out, a nayle.

Descoché: m. ée: f. Shot, loossed, or sent, as an arrow out of a Bow.

Descocher vne fleiche. To shoote; loosse, or send an arrow from a bow.

Descoeffé: m. ée: f. Vncoifed, vnhooded, whose head is disarrayed, or vncouered.

Descoeffer. To vncoife; disarray, disattire, vnhood, vncouer, the head.

Descogneu: m. euë: f. Vnknowne, not kowne, forgotten; also, disaduowed, or denyed.

Descognoissance: f. A not knowing, or forgetting of; also, a disaduowing, or denyall.

Descognoistre. To vnknow, or to not know, to forget what one hath knowne; also, to disaduow, deny; take no notice of.

Descoiffer. To vncoife, or pull a coife off the head; or, as Descoeffer. Descolé: m. ée: f. Vnglued. Descoler. To vnglue, to loosse, or plucke asunder, things that are glued.

Descollé: m. ée: f. Decapitated, beheaded.

Descoller. To decapitate; behead, or cut the head off.

Descoloré: m. ée: f. Discoloured, or decayed in colour; that hath lost colour; also, pale, bleake, wanne, lew.

Se Descombatre de. To rid his hands of, or deliuer- himselfe from.

Descombré: m. ée: f. Disincombred; vnpestered; cleered of; rid, or freed from; also, warranted (in law.)

Descombrement: m. A disincombring, or vnpestering; also, a warranting (in law.)

Descombrer. To disincomber, or vnpester; to rid, free, deliuer from, cleere of, incombrances; also, to warrant (in law.)

Descombres: f. The ruines of decayed, the rubbish of down-fallen, buildings; also, a cleering of a ground &c from them.

Descompt: m. An accompt giuen for things receaued; a backe-reckoning.

Descompter. To accompt (for the proffits of land &c receaued,) to accompt backe, or make a backe reckoning.

Desconfire. To discomfit, vanquish, defeate; ruine.

Desconfiture: f. A defeature, ouerthrow, discomfiture; also, a distribution, or equall sharing of a bankrupts goods among all his creditors, as farre as they will goe; whence; Payer par desconfiture. A debtor bankrupt, or decayed, to pay his creditors after some such small rate as xij pence in the pound.

Desconfiz. Defeated, discomfited, vanquished; ouer-*throwne.

Desconfort: m. Discomfort; sadnesse, pensiuenesse, heauinesse of hart; griefe, that will not admit, or cannot taste, of comfort.

Desconforté: m. ée: f. Discomforted, disconsolated; most heauie, sad, pensiue; much out of hart.

Se Desconforter. To be discomforted; most heauie, sad, pensiue; to be much out of hart.

Desconseillé: m. ée: f. Discounselled, dissuaded from, aduised to the contrarie of; also, vncounselled, void of counsell, wanting aduise.

Desconseiller. To discounsell, dissuade, dehort, aduise vnto the contrary.

Desconseilleur. A dissuader, dehorter; a counsellor, or aduiser, to the contrarie.

Desconsolé: m. ée: f. Comfortlesse, discomforted.

Desconsoler. To discomfort, sadden, grieue; to make or leaue desolate.

Descontenancé: m. ée: f. Abashed, put out of countenance.  Gestes fols, & descontenancez. Vncomelie, vngracefull, ill-fauored, gestures.

Desconvenuë: f. Griefe, sorrow, trouble, discomfort; misfortune, inconuenience.

Descordant. Vntwisting, vndoing, loossing a cord, or string.

Descordelé. Vntwisted, vntwined.

Descordeler. To vntwist a cord, or string.

Descorder en chantant. as Desaccorder. To iarre.

Descorder vne corde. To vndoe, or vntwist, a cord.

Descouché: m. ée: f. Gotten vp, risen out of bed; also, lyen from; also, dislodged, or put from his lodging.

Descoucher. To ly from, also to dislodge; to depriue of, or put beside, his lodging.  Se Descoucher. To get vp, to rise out of bed.

Descoudre. To vnsowe, vndoe stitches, rip or breake open stitched things.

Descouler. To slide, or slip away, to glide along; See Decouler. Descoulouré: m. ée: f. Discoulored, distayned; growne pale, wanne, lewe; that hath lost it colour, or hue. Descoulourement: m. A discouloring, or distayning; a loosing, or taking away, of coulor.

Descoulorer. To discoulour, or distaine; to make pale, wanne, lew; to take away the hue of.

Descoulpé: m. ée: f. Discharged; cleered, purged, rid of an imputation, deliuered from blame.

Descoulper. To discharge, cleere, purge, rid of an imputation, free from blame.

Descoupé. Looke Decoupé. Descouple: m. The vncoupling of houndes, or loossing them after their game.

Descouplé: m. ée: f. Vncoupled.

Descoupler. To vncouple; to loosse, or let goe, out of couples.

Descourable: com. Slipperie, flitting; easely escaping from the place it was put in.

Descouragé: m. ée: f. Discouraged, amated, made heartlesse, in dispaire, out of conceit with his own fortune, or valour.

Descourager. To discourage, vnharten, feare, frighten, apall, put into doubt, driue out of hart, bring out of conceit,with his owne fortune, or worth.

Descouronné: m. ée: f. Vncrowned, put frō a crown.