Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/298

 nimble, gentle, pliant; also, dispatched, rid out of the way.

Desgourdir. To vnbenumme; to quicken, reuiue, resolue a thing that is benummed, or stiffe with cold; also, to supple; to make, or wax nimble, gentle, plyant; also, to rid, or dispatch out of the way.

Desgourmé: m. ée: f. Vncurbed.

Desgourmer vn cheval. To vncurbe a horse.

Desgoust: m. as Degout. Desgousté. Tastlesse, distastfull, without stomacke; nice, daintie; disdainefull, wayward, froward; loathing euerie thing, pleased with nothing; out of the humour with, hauing no mind vnto.

Desgoustement: m. A distasting, loathing, abhorring of meats; also, the strange lusting, or longing of women.

Desgouster. To distast, loath; dislike, abhorre; be out of humor with, haue no mind, nor maw vnto.

Desgouziller. To gulpe, or swill vp, to swallow downe.

Desgozillé. Whose throat is cut.

Desgradé: m. ée: f. Degraded, deposed, put from a place, or degree.

Desgrader. To degrade, or depose; to depriue of, or put from, a place, or degree.

Desgrafé: m. ée: f. Vnclasped, vngrapled, vnhooked, loossed from.

Desgrafer. To vngraple, vnclaspe, vnhooke; loosse, or sunder, things that are grapled.

Desgraissé: m. ée: f. Vnfattened, made leane; also, cleansed, purged, vngreased, rid of grease; also, rifled.

Desgraisser. To vnfatten; vngrease; rid of fat; purge from grease; make leane; or cleane; also, to rifle.  Terre à desgraisser. Fullers earth.

Desgrapher. as Desgrafer. Desgravir. To fetch, or throw, downe a climbing thing.

Desgressé; &, Desgresser. as Desgraissé, & Desgraisser. Desgrossé: m. ée: f. Lessened, subtilized, made small, fine, or lesse grosse; also, polished, refined, made handsome, brought into fashion.

Desgrosser. To lessen, vngreaten, subtilize, make small, fine, or lesse grosse; also, to polish, refine, make handsome, bring into fashion.

Desgrossir. as Desgrosser. Desguerpir. Looke Deguerpir. Desguerpissement: m. A quitting, leauing, abandoning, forgoing, giuing ouer of.

Desguerpisseur: m. as Deguerpisseur. Desguerpy: m. ie: f. Quit, left, abandoned, forgone, yeelded vp, giuen ouer.

Desguilleté: m. ée: f. Vntrussed; or whose hose are depriued of their points.

Desguilletter. To vntrusse, vnty, or vndoe points; also, to take points from.

Desguindé: m. ée: f. Let downe, or let fall, from the height it was lift vp vnto.

Desguinder. To let downe, or let fall (a thing) from the height it was lift vp vnto.

Desguisé: m. ée: f. Disguised; dissembled, fained, counterfeited; adulterated, falsified, sophisticated.

Desguisement: m. A disguising; a dissembling, counterfeiting, faining; a falsifying, adulterating, sophisticating.

Desguiser. To disguise; to counterfeit, or set a false coat or glosse on; to alter, adulterate, falsifie, sophisticate. Se desguiser. To faine, dissemble, counterfeit, be dou-* *ble, false, hollow-hearted; say one thing, and meane another.

Desguiseure: f. as Desguisement. Deshabillé: m. ée: f. Disarrayed, vnclothed.

Deshabiller. To disarray, vncloth, make vnreadie; put, or take, off clothes.

Deshabité. Disinhabited, without inhabitants.

Deshabiter. To disinhabitate, or depriue of inhabitants.

Deshaict: m. Sadnesse, heauinesse, pensiuenesse; disquiet.

Deshait. as Deshaict. Deshaité: m. ée: f. Sad, grieued, pensiue, heauie-hearted, depriued of ioy, deuoid of gladnesse; also, crasie, sicklie, vnhealthfull.  Tu m'as deshaité. Thou hast turned my ioy into sadnesse.

Deshaitement: m. Vnhealthfulnesse, infirmitie, sadnesse, pensiuenesse.

Deshalé de famine. Pined, withered, worne away through hunger; starued.  Vn cheval deshalé. Out of heart; haled, or tyred out.

Deshanché: m. ée: f. Whose hanches are broken, or put out of ioynt.

Deshancher. To breake, or put out of ioynt, the hips, or hanches.

Deshanté: m. ée: f. Disused, or not haunted as in former times; also, whose handle, or staffe is broken, or taken from it.

Deshanter. To forbeare his haunt; to leaue the companie of; also, to take from the head of a Speare &c the handle, or staffe thereto belonging.

Desharnaché: m. ée: f. Vnharnessed, vntrapped; vnfurnished, or whose furniture is taken off.

Desharnacher. To vnharnesse, or vntrap; to take off the furniture from a horse.

Desheaulmé. Bereaued of his helmet.

Desheaulmer. To take a helmet from the head.

Desherance. Want of heires; or, the inheritance of one that hath left no heire behind him; an Escheat for want of heires.  Droict de des. See Droict. Desheritance: f. A disseisin.

Desherité. Disseised, disinherited, depriued of an inheritance.

Desheritement: m. A disinheriting, a disseising.

Desheriter. To disseise, disinherite, bereaue of an inheritance.

Deshingandé: m. ée: f. Lift, or throwne, off the hindges; out of frame, out of all order.

Deshingander. To lift, or throw, off the hindges; to put out of frame, bring out of all order.

Deshonneste: com. Dishonest, leud, bad; foule, impure, filthie, villanous; vnfitting, vnbeseeming, dishonourable.

Deshonnestement. Dishonestly, impurely, vilely, filthily, badly, leudly, naughtily, dishonourably, shamefully.

Deshonnesteté. Dishonestie, leudnesse, villanie, badnesse; filthinesse, impuritie; basenesse, vilenesse, vnseemelinesse.

Deshonneur: f. Dishonour, shame, reproach, infamie, disgrace, obloquie, discredit, ignominie.

Deshonoration. A dishonouring, discrediting, disgracing, defaming, traducing.

Deshonoré: m. ée: f. Dishonoured, discredited, disgraced, shamed, traduced, defamed.