Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/304

 La despouille d'arbres. Their fruit, leaues, barke, boughes.  Les despouilles de bastimens. All kind of rubbish.  Les despouilles de iardins. Weedes; withered, or dead hearbes; refuse, or out-cast staulkes, leaues, &c.  La despouille de terres. Corne, hay; all kinds of fruits comming in by Husbandrie; or of themselues yeelded by, or otherwise gotten within, grounds.  La despouille de vignes. Grapes.

Despouillé: m. ée: f. Stript, disarrayed, vnclothed; despoyled, depriued, vnfurnished of; robbed, pilled, polled; also, flayed, mued, vncoated.

Despouille-autels. Sacrilegious, altar-spoyling, church-despoyling.

Despouillement. A despoyling, taking off, or away; a stripping, disarraying; depriuing, or vnfurnishing of; a flaying; a muing, a casting of the skin, or coat.

Despouiller. To strip, vncloth, disarray; to despoyle, take away, vnfurnish, depriue, or bare of; to rob, pill, pole, spoyle; also, to flay, or take the skin off.  Despouiller vn cerf; to breake vp a Deere.   Se Despouiller. To vncloth himselfe; to mue himselfe; to cast his coat, or skin.  Se despouiller avant que se coucher; to make his heires, in his life time, absolute Maisters of all he hath.   On ne peut despouiller vn homme nud: Prov. ''Of a naked man who can haue clothes? Where there is nothing, the King looses his rights.''

Despoulser. To expulse, or thrust out of.

Despourpré: m. ée: f. Whose (purple) hue is lost, altered, or decayed.

Se Despourprer. To loose it purple hue.

Despourveu. as Desprouveu; Vnprouided. Despravation. A corrupting, deprauing, marring; a crooking, wrying, spoyling.

Despravé: m. ée: f. Depraued, marred, corrupted, spoyled.

Despraver. To depraue, corrupt, viciate, spoyle, marre; make crooked, wrest, wry to bad purposes.

Desprendre. To loosse from, to let his hold goe.

Desprier. To vnpray, disintreat; reuoke a suit, recall prayers, desire to the contrary.

Despris: m. Disesteeme, despisall, neglect, little regard, small respect, contempt, or disdaine of.  Despris de Dieu. Impietie, wickednesse, vngraciousnesse, extreame vngodlinesse.

Desprisable: com. Vile, base, despiseable, contemptible.

Desprisé: m. ée: f. Disesteemed, neglected, made light of, prised verie low; despised, disdained, contemned; also, dispraised, discommended, blamed, condemned.

Desprisement: m. A disesteeming, neglecting, low-prising; despising, disdaining, contemning; dispraising, blaming, condemning.

Despriser. To disesteeme, vilipend, neglect, make light of, set naught by, prize at a low rate; to despise, contemne, disdaine; also, to blame, condemne, dispraise, discommend.

Despriseresse: f. A disesteemeresse, despiseresse, or dispraiseresse of; a scornefull, or disdainefull, woman.

Despriseur: m. A disesteemer, neglecter, despiser, or dispraiser of.

Desprisonné: m. ée: f. Disimprisoned; deliuered from, got out of, prison; freed, set at libertie.

Desprisonner. To vnprison, or disimprison; to deliuer from, to get, or take, out of prison; to free; to set at libertie.

Desprouveu: m. euë: f. Vnprouided, vnfurnished; deuoid of, without. A desprouveu. At vnawares; without thinking of, or looking for; or, vnthought on, vnlooked for; napping, as Mosse tooke his Mate.

Despucelé: m. ée: f. Depucelated, deflowred, vnmaidened; depriued of, or that hath lost, her maidenhead.  Espée despucelée. That hath beene imbrued; that hath beene dipped in, or seasoned with, bloud; that hath drawne bloud.

Despuceler. To depucelate, deflowre, take the maidenhead of, depriue of her maidenhead.

Despucellage: m. Depucelage; a deflowring.

Despucellement: m. A depucelating, or deflowring; the taking of a maidenhead.

Despumé: m. ée: f. Scummed; clarified; whose foame, or froath is taken away.

Despumer. To clarifie; to scumme the foame, or froth, off.

Desracher. To plucke off, or teare away. ¶Rab. Desraciné: m. ée: f. Rooted vp, or out; plucked vp by the roots.

Desracinement: m. A rooting out, a plucking vp by the root.

Desraciner. To deracinate, root out, or plucke vp by the root.

Desraison: f. Wrong, iniustice, vnreasonablenesse, want of reason.

Desraisonnable: com. Wrongfull, vniust, vnreasonable.

Desraisonné: m. ée: f. Without reason, bereft of reason.

Desramé: m. ée: f. Without boughes, or branches; whose boughes haue bene cut, and lopped off.

Desramer. To vnpearch, to plucke off, or pull downe from a bough; to rid, bare, or depriue of boughes.

Desrangé: m. ée: f. Disranked, disordered, disarrayed.

Desranger. To disranke, disarray, disorder; to thrust out of his ranke, put out of array; turne out of order.

Desrayé: m. ée: f. Disordered, out of order and array, out of his due place.

Desreiglé: m. ée: f. Vnrulie, disordered, outragious, vnbridled; vnmannerlie; immoderate, immodest; irregular, vnreasonable, vnmeasurable, out of frame.

Desreiglemént: m. Vnrulinesse; disorder, outrage; immoderatenesse, immodestie, lauishneße, outlashing; irregularitie.

Desreiglément. Disorderedly, vnrulily, outragiously, immoderately, immodestly; out of square, beyond all meane, without all measure.

Se Desreigler. To be vnrulie, or vnreasonable; to disorder himselfe; to be out of order, out of all frame.

Desrene: f. A iustification, or proofe of the denyall of an act, or fact, wherewith a man is charged by his aduersarie. ¶Norm.

Desrener. To dereine; to iustifie, or make good, the denyall of an act, or fact. ¶Norm.

Desreté: m. ée: f. Vnsnared, freed, or deliuered out of a net.