Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/296

 heauinesse, irksomenesse, carke, or care.

Desennuyer. To expell wearinesse, or tediousnesse; to driue away heauinesse, carke, or care.

Desenrouillé: m. ée: f. Skowred, furbushed, or cleansed from rust.

Desenrouiller. To skowre, furbush, or take the rust from.

Desenroulé: m. ée: f. Cassed, put from his wages, rased out of the roule, or list of; also, vnrouled, vnfoulded.

Desenrouler. To vnfold, or vnroule; as Desrouler; also, to casse, discharge, put out of the rowle, or list of.

Desenseigner. To vnteach, or teach otherwise then was taught before.

Desenseveli: m. ie: f. Vnburied, taken out of the graue.

Desensevelir. To vnburie, to take out of a graue.

Desensorcelé: m. ée: f. Vnbewitched, exorcised.

Desensorceler. To vnbewitch, exorcise, rid from sorcerie.

Desentassé: m. ée: f. Vnheaped; taken off a heape.

Desentasser. To vnheape, vnload; take off a heape, or load.

Desenterré: m. ée: f. Disinterred, vnburied.

Desenterrer. To vnburie, to take out of the earth againe.

Desentortillé: m. ée: f. Vntwisted, vnwrithen, vnwouen.

Desentourner. To turne, or wind off; to take from about.

Desentraillé: m. ée: f. Paunched, bowelled.

Desentrailler. To paunch, to bowell, or vnbowell; to draw.

Desenvelopper. as Desveloper. Desenyvré: m. ée: f. Made, or become sober, (after drunkennesse.)

Desenyvrer. To rid from drunkennesse, to make sober againe.

Desequé. as Defequé. Desert: m. A Desart, a Wildernesse, a place vnfrequented, or abandoned of inhabitants.

Desert. as Deserté. Appel desert. An appeale made before the time, or vnfitly, and out of time; or, an appeale neither begun, nor followed, as it ought to haue beene.

Deserte: f. Desert, merit; Sans deserte. Vndeseruedly.

Deserté: m. ée: f. Forsaken, desolate, desart, vnhabited, abandoned of all men.

Deserter. To make desart; to ruine a whole nation; of an inhabited place to make an vninhabited Wildernesse.

Deserteur: m. A forsaker, stragler, fugitiue; runne-*away; one that abandoneth his friend, cause, or countrey.

Desertion: f. A leauing, abandoning, forsaking.  Desertion d'appel. An vnfit, vndue, or vntimelie appealing; an appeale vnseasonably begun, and vnorderly followed; also, a fayling in, or giuing ouer of, an appeale.  Desertion de cause. A Nonsuit, or letting fall of a Suit.

Deservice. Disseruice, a displeasure, ill office, bad turne.

Deservi: m. ie: f. Deserued, merited; earned.

Deservir. To deserue, to earne, to merite, (whether it be well or ill.) Deservir sus table. ''To take away. See'' Desservir. Desesperable: com. Despaireable, vnhopefull.

Desesperade: f. A kind of mournefull song.  Iouër à la desesperade. To set his whole rest, or set all on sixes, and seuens; to throw at all.

Desesperance: f. Desperatenesse, despaire.

Desesperément. Desperatly, hopelessely, in desperation, without any hope of helpe, or of successe.

Desesperer. To despaire; to be in despaire, or without hope.

Desespoir: m. Despaire, desperation.

Desestimé: m. ée: f. Disesteemed, neglected, set naught by.

Desestimer. To disesteeme, neglect, contemne, set naught by, make no reckoning of.

Desestouffé: m. ée: f. Vnstuffed, emptied, euacuated.

Desestouffer. To emptie, euacuate, vnstuffe.

Desestourdi: m. ie: f. Vnamased, recouered of, roused from, astonishment.

Desestourdir. To recouer of, or to rouse from, an astonishment.

Desfacer. as Effacer. Desfacher. Looke Desfascher. Desfacilé: m. ée: f. Put out of ioynt. ¶Rab. Desfaict: m. cte: f. Vndone; broken; defeated, discomfited, ouercome; ruined, destroyed, ouerthrowne.  Vn visage desfaict. Growne very leane, pale, wan; or, decayed in feature, and colour.

Desfaicte: f. A defeat, or defeature; a discomfiture, or ouerthrow; also, a shift, excuse, euasion, auoidance; (Looke Defaitte) also, a riddance, dispatch, cleering the hands of, putting off.  Il sçait ses desfaictes. He is a very cunning Marchant, he will make shift for one.

Desfaire. To vndoe; breake; defeat, discomfit, ouercome; ruine, destroy, ouerthrow.  Desfaire vn cerf. To breake vp a red Deere.  Se Desfaire de. To rid, or deliuer himselfe from; to quit himselfe, to dispatch, or cleere his hands, of.  Se desfaire soy mesme. To murther, or make away, himselfe; to lay violent hands on himselfe.  Assez faict qui s'en desfaict: Prov. He does enough that rids himselfe of (a whore.)

Desfait, & Desfaitte. as Desfaict, & Desfaicte. Desfarouché: m. ée: f. Reclaymed, made gentle, tamed.

Desfaroucher. To make gentle, to reclayme, or tame.

Desfasché: m. ée: f. Appeased, quieted, calmed; eased, comforted, lightened at the hart.

Desfascher. To appease, quiet; ease, comfort, lighten the hart; to take away loathing, or irksomenesse.

Desfaveur. Disfauor; want, or losse, of fauour.

Desfavorisé: m. ée: f. Disfauoured, out of fauour with.

Desfavoriser. To disfauor, not to fauour; to withdraw his fauor from, to banish from his fauour.

Desfermé: m. ée: f. Vnshut, layed open, disclosed; discouered.

Desfermer. To vnshut, lay open, disclose; discouer.

Desferre: f. An old suit of apparrell, cast clothes; also, as Disferre; also, an intangled, and vnprofitable businesse; also, a shift, or shifting.  Ces gens sont de fascheuse desferre. These are vnrulie, stubborne, obstinate, froward people; they are ill to be gouerned, hard to be pleased.

Desferré. Vnshod, or, hauing cast his shooes, as a horse;