Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/317

 Faire discussion sur les biens d'un debteur. To prise, or examine the value of, a debtors goods, thereby to know how able he is to satisfie Creditors.

Discuté: m. ée: f. Discussed, debated, examined, diligently sought into, narrowly sifted out; also, prised, or praised, as a debtors goods.

Discuter. To discusse, examine, debate, search into, sift out; also, to value, or praise goods.

Discuteur: m. A discusser, examiner, debater; also, a valuer, or praiser of goods, to see what they are worth.

Discution. as Discussion. Diseaux de gerbes. Sheafes of corne set tenne and tenne in a heape; halfe-thraues of tenne sheaues apeece; (ten-sheaued) stonks, or shocks of corne.

Disenier: m. A Counsellor, or Alderman of a Citie; also, a Captaine, or Commaunder ouer tenne souldiours; Looke Dixenier. Disentourner. To vnturne, or turne off.

Disert: m. erte: f. Eloquent, well spoken, of good vtterance.

Disertement. Eloquently, elegantly, with choice words and good vtterance.

Diseteux: m. euse: f. Needie, wanting, in want, poore, beggarlie, penurious, vnfurnished of necessaries.

Disette: f. Want, scarcitie, beggarie, lacke, pouertie, necessitie, dearth, penurie, needinesse.

Diseur: m. A speaker, an arguer, a pleader, a prater.  Diseur d'heures. A Chaplaine; a sayer of prayers.

Disferre: f. An horse-shoe of two peeces ioyned together at the top with an yron pinne, and thereby straitened, or enlarged, to fit the foot, at pleasure.

Disgrace: f. A disgrace; an ill fortune, hard lucke; defeature, check-mate, mishap; also, vncomelinesse, vnseemelinesse,illfauorednesse; a deformitie, ill fashion, rude behauior, ouglie manner.

Disgratié: m. ée: f. Vnhappie, vnluckie, disastrous, vnfortunate; also, vnseemelie, deformed, vnhandsome, vncomelie.

Disgregé: m. ée: f. Disgregated, dispersed, scattered, seuered, sundered.

Disgreger. To disgregate, disperse, scatter, seuer, sunder.

Disjonctif: m. iue: f. Disiunctiue, disioyning, disuniting, diuiding.

Disjonction: f. A disiunction, diuision, disunitement, parting, or putting asunder.

Dislayer. as Delayer. To deferre, delay, put off.

Dislocation: f. A dislocation, a displacing.  Dislocation de membre. A putting out of ioynt.

Disloqué: m. ée: f. Displaced; put out of ioynt.

Disloquer. To put out of ioynt; to remoue out of his due place; to displace.

Dismages. Tythings, or matters belonging to tythes.

Disme: f. A tythe, or tenth of.  Dismes infeudées, ou infeodées. Impropriations of tythes.  Disme, & terrage à deux mains. Looke Main. Veau de disme. A notable sot, blockhead, lob-*cocke.  Amasser la disme de l'ail. To procure vnto himselfe a sound beating; (In Poictou they say of one that hath beene well cudgelled, Il vouloit amasser la disme de l'ail. Because the Poicteuins will not suffer Tythe-Garlicke to be payed.

Dismé: m. ée: f. Tythed, whereof tythe is taken. Dismer. To tythe, or take the tenth of.

Dismerie: f. A tenth, tythe, or tything; the title, or possession of a tythe; a place whereout tythe is due.

Dismeur: m. A tythe-gatherer; the owner of tythes, or he to whom tythe is due.

Dismier. A tyther; or, as Dismeur. Disné. Dined.  Ou nous avous disné nous souperons: Prov. Looke Souper. Disner: m. A dinner; and (sometimes more generally) a meale.  Disner d'Advocats. A large meale; (eaten, not giuen.)  Disner de chien. Hounds fare, onely bread and water; or a meale wherein there is nothing drunke but water.  Disner de mouche. A poore pittance, a small bit, a little morsell, a Sparrowes dinner.  Disner de semonce. A feast, or solemn dinner, whereunto many guests are inuited aforehand.  Contre disner appert vallet: Prov. When meat is to be had my man appeares (sayes the ill-serued Maister.)  Petit disner longuement attendu, n'est pas donné, mais cherement vendu: Pro. Looke Attendu. Qui garde son disner il a mieux à souper: Prov. He that keepes his dinner hath the better supper.

Disner. To dine.  Mal soupe qui tout disne: Prov. Hee suppes ill that dines all; after a gluttonous, and disordinat youth followes a needie, and hungrie age.

Disparagement: m. A disparagement; an vnfit, or vnworthie condition offered vnto, or imposed on, a man. ¶Norm. Disparer. ou, se Disparoir. To vanish away, to withdraw himselfe, or slinke out of sight on a suddaine.

Disparoissance: f. A disappearing, or vanishing out of sight; a suddaine withdrawing, or slinking out of companie.

Disparution: f. A disparition; or, as Disparoissance. Dispathie: f. An Antipathie, or naturall disagreement.

Dispensaire: m. A Dispensatorie, or Booke, that teacheth how to make all Phisicall compositions.

Dispensateur: m. A Dispenser; a Disposer of things.

Dispensation: f. A dispensation; a distribution, or disposing of things.

Dispense: f. as Dispensation. Dispensé: m. ée: f. Dispensed with; released, or held excused; also, proportionably distributed, or disposed of.

Dispenser. To dispence with, to take leaue of; to release, or giue leaue vnto; also, proportionably to distribute, or dispose of.

Dispersé: m. ée: f. Dispersed, scattered, sundered farre.

Dispersion: f. A dispersing, scattering, dissipation.

Dispos: m. ose: f. Nimble, actiue, lustie, sound, well disposed in body.

Disposé: m. ée: f. Disposed, ordered, sorted, appointed, trimmed, set in frame, put in array.

Disposer. To dispose, raunge, order, trim, dresse, appoint, set in frame, put in array.

Dispositeur: m. A disposer, sorter, orderer, arraunger of.