Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/309

 Desyvré: m. ée: f. Made sober againe.

Desyvrer. To make sober after drunkennesse.

Det: m. A dye to play with; See Dé.

Detail: m. A Peecemealing; a hewing, or cutting in peeces; (hence) also, retaile, small sale, or a selling by parcells, or in peeces.

Detaillé: m. ée: f. Peecemealed; cut into parcells, hewed in peeces (or, as Destaillé;) also, retailed, sold by retaile.

Detailler. To peecemeale, to cut into parcells, or peeces; (hence) also, to retaile, or sell by retaile.

Detailleur. A retailer, or tradesman that sells by retaile.

Detalenté: m. ée: f. Vnwilling, lustlesse, vndisposed, out of the humor, that hath no disposition vnto a thing.

Detapper. To vnbung, to open the bung-hole of: ¶Blesien.) Detendre. See Destendre.

Detenir. To detaine, or withhold; also, to retaine, busie, occupie, stay, hold, continue in a place; also, to restraine, or keepe in.

Detente d'arquebuse: f. The Tent of a Caleeuer; the little peece of yron that keepes the Cocke vp.

Detenteur: m. A detainer; a wrongfull keeper of possession; a withholder of another mans right.

Detention: f. A detention; detaining, withhoulding; restraining.

Detenu: m. uë: f. Detained, withheld; restrained, kept in; busied, occupied.

Detenuë: f. as Detention. Detergent: m. ente: f. Cleansing, scouring, rubbing away, wiping off.

Deterioration: f. An impairing, or making worse.

Deterioré: m. ée: f. Impaired, marred, spoiled; growne, or made, worse.

Deteriorer. To impaire, make worse, marre, spoyle, stroy.

Determinance: f. An order, decree, ordinance, sentence, determination; an ending, conclusion, determination of a matter alreadie debated.

Determiné: m. ée: f. Determined, resolued on, ended, concluded.  Vn homme determiné. A resolute, or couragious fellow; one that feares no dangers, dreads no colours.

Determinément. Resolutely, couragiously; also, with a full end, and conclusion of matters; determinately.

Determiner. To determine, conclude, resolue on, end, finish.

Deterré: m. ée: f. Digged, or taken out of the earth; also, disinherited, disseised, left landlesse.

Deterrer. To dig, or take out of the ground; also, to disinherit; depriue of, leaue without, land.

Detersif: m. iue: f. Detersiue; of a scouring, or cleansing qualitie.

Detestable: com. Detestable, execrable, abhominable, most odious, exceeding loathsome.

Detestation: f. A detestation, loathing, abhorring.

Detesté: m. ée: f. Detested, loathed, abhorred.

Detester. To detest, loath, abhorre, haue in abhomination.

Dethroner, ou Dethrosner. as Desthroner.

Detiré: m. ée: f. Racked, retched, or stretched out with violence; almost pulled in peeces.

Detirer. To racke, retch, or stretch out with violence; to pull almost in peeces.

Detomber. To vntombe, or take out of a tombe.

Detordre. To wrie, to writh, &c; See Destordre. Detouillé: m. ée: f. Disincombred; also, disintangled, vnsnarled.

Detouiller. To disincomber, or vnpester; also, to vnsnarle, or disintangle; and hence;  I'ay beaucoup à detouiller. I haue much intricate, and shuffled, businesse to order.

Detourbier. as Destourbier.

Detracter. To detract from; to slaunder, backbite, depraue, dispraise, traduce, report ill of; disparage in speeches; raile on, reuile one, behind his backe.

Detracteur: m. A detractor; slaunderer, backbiter, deprauer; an ordinarie traducer, or dsparager of others behind their backs; an ill-tongued, or foule-mouthed fellow.

Detraction: f. Detraction; slaunder, backbiting, deprauation, discrediting, misreport of, priuate disgracing, or disparaging; slaunderous speeches, reproachfull tearmes giuen of one behind his backe.

Detrapper. as Destraper.

Detraqué: m. ée: f. Out of the tract, iust path, right way; or, as Destraqué.

Se Detraquer. To put himselfe out of his path, or out of the way; Looke Destraquer.

Detravé. le monde est tout detravé. The world is cleane out of square, out of fashion, out of frame, out of order, off the hindges.

Detrencher. See Destrancher.

Detresse: f. Looke, Destresse.

Detrichoüere: as Dextrochere; also, the fould of leather wherewith yarne-winders preserue their fingers from skarres; also, the sharp Iron wherein the quill, or spindle of a wheele doeth twirle.

Detriment: m. Detriment, losse, domage, hurt, hinderance, decay.

Detrimenteux: m. euse: f. Hurtfull, dommageous; much hindering, full of losse, dammage, disaduantage.

Detristé: m. ée: f. Comforted, cheered vp; whose griefe is allayed, whose sorrow layed aside.

Detrister. To driue away sadnesse.

Detrompé: m. ée: f. Deliuered from error.

Detromper. To vndeceiue, to rid of error.

Detroussément. as Destroussément.

Dette: f. A debt; See Debte.

Deturper. To defile, file, fowle, soyle, make foule or ill-fauored.

Deu: m. deuë: f. Due, owed, or owing, ones owne; also, iust, fit, right, apt, seasonable, conuenient.

Devallant. Descending, alighting; bringing, or letting downe; tumbling, or throwing downe.

Devallé: m. ée: f. Brought, or let downe; tumbled, or throwne downeward; descended, alighted.

Devallée: f. A descent, or low ground; a fall in ground.

Devallement: m. A descent, an alighting; a sliding, or going downe; a bringing, or letting, a tumbling, or throwing, downeward.

Devaller. To bring, or let downe, to tumble, or throw downeward; also, to descend, alight; slide, or goe downe.

Devancé: m. ée: f. Outgone, exceeded, stripped, ouerrunne, preceded, got before.

Devancer. To strip, outgoe, ouerrunne, get, or goe before; to preuent; precede, forerunne.

Devancier. nos Deuanciers. Our auncestors, or predecessors, our forefathers.

Devancier: m. ere: f. Forerunning, preceding, more old, of greater antiquitie then; got, or gone before; out-*going, exceeding, that hath ouerrunne another.