Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/320

 other substances gotten within the ground, throughout France, due vnto the King; also, the Admiralls share, or part (being a tenth) of all shipwrackes, prizes, conquests, &c, made at Sea.

Dixme; &, Dixmer. as Disme; &, Dismer. Dixneuf. Nineteene.

Dixneufiesme. The nineteenth.

Dixsept. Seuenteene.

Dizain: m. A tenth; also, a Dittie of tenne Stanzoes, or Stanzo of tenne verses; also, a paire of beades containing tenne peeces (or courses;) also, a (French) Pennie.

Dizain: m. ine: f. Of, or belonging to, tenne; tenne, or containing iust tenne.

Dizaine: f. A tenth; tenne whole parts; the number of tenne.

Dizeaux. as Diseaux. Döanne. as Doüane. Dobbe: f. A Tub.

Dobé: m. ée: f. Beaten, lammed, bethwacked.

Dober. To beat, swinge, lamme, bethwacke; to canuasse throughly.

Docile: com. Docible, teachable, tractable, apt to learne, quickly taught, easily instructed, soone conceiuing.

Docilisé: m. ée: f. Made docible, teachable; tractable.

Dociliser. To docilize, to make docible, tractable, teachable.

Docilité: f. Docilitie, aptnesse to learne, quicknesse of apprehension.

Docte: com. Learned, skillfull, cunning, throughly instructed.

Doctement. Learnedly, skilfully, cunningly, clerke-like.

Docteur: m. A Doctor.  Docteur de Quandoque. A Dunsicall Doctor.  Docteur en gaye science. A Doctor of Rie; (In Tholouse they sometimes vse to make a merrie companion proceed Doctor with this title:) ¶Rab. Doctoral: m. ale: f. Doctorall; of, or belonging to, a Doctor.

Doctorande: f. The solemnitie, or time of proceeding Doctor in any Art; Doctors commencement.

Doctorat: m. A Doctorship; the degree of a Doctor.

Doctorie: f. The degree of a Doctor; a Doctorship.

Doctrinable: com. Docible, teachable, apt to learne, fit to be taught.

Doctrinal. The patterne of learning.

Doctrine: f. Learning, doctrine, schollership, science, clerkeship; skill in, knowledge of, good letters.  Doctrine du Palais. Ciuilitie, courtesie, good maners, courtlie behauiour, fashion, carriage.

Document: m. A document, precept; instruction, admonition; experiment, example.

Dodecaëdre. A Geometrical bodie, or figure, of twelue faces.

Dodechedron. A twelue-conered proportion, or figure.

Dodeliné: m. ée: f. Rocked; also, fondly nodding, vnsteadily carried; also, dandled, lolled, lulled, sedled.

Dodelinement: m. A rocking; also, a foolish nodding, vnsteadie wagging (as of the head) vp and downe; also, a dandling, lolling, or lulling of. Dodeliner. To rocke, or iog vp and downe; also, to dandle, to loll, or lull, to fedle, cocker, hug fondly, make a wanton of.  Dodeliner de la teste. To nod often, or wag the head much; to carrie the head vnsteadily, or like a boat in a storme.

Dodelineur. The rocker of a cradle; or as Dodelineux. Dodelineux: m. A rocker; also, one that nods much, or wags his head verie often; also, a fond, fantasticall, or giddie-headed noddie; one whose head, and humours are most vnsteadie; also, a fawning, or flattering companion.

Dodelineux: m. euse: f. Much nodding, often wagging the head; also, toyish, fond, fantasticall, humorous, vnsteadie-headed, giddie-braind.

Dodentral. See Dodrental. Dodine: f. A fond, or giddie wag of the head; or as Dodelinement. Canars à la dodine. Serued in with (French) onion sauce.

Dodiner. To rocke; shake, shog, wag vp and downe; or, as Dodeliner. Dodineux. as Dodelineux. Dodo. A word wherewith Nurses rocke, or lull, their sucklings asleepe.  Apres bu dodo: Prov. After swink sleepe.

Dodrental: m. ale: f. Nine ounces heauie; nine inches, or a full span, long.

Dodu: m. A fat chops, or chuffe.

Dodu: m. uë: f. Fat, plump, chuffie, round-cheeked, full-bodied.

Doët: m. A brooke, or spring.

Dogguin: m. A filthie great old curre.

Dogmatiser. To teach strange doctrine; to breed a sect, or broach new opinions.

Dogmatisme: m. The teaching, or preaching of new doctrine, the producing of a new sect.

Dogmatiste: m. A forger of new sects, or opinions; one that makes, or would trie, conclusions.

Dogue: m. A Mastiffe, or great dog.

Doigt: m. A finger; also, a fingers breadth; or the sixteenth part of a foot, in measuring. Les cinq doigts nostre Dame. Fiue-leaued grasse. Se donner du doigt dans l'oeil. se pensans signer se donnent du doigt dans l'oeil. Thinking to crosse, they scratch, themselues: (appliable to ignorant, or heedlesse coxcombes.) Mettre le doigt dessus. Tu as mis le doigt dessus. Thou hast hit it, or ghessed aright (from them that lay their hand on their smut.) Mettre le doigt entre le bois, & l'escorce. To loue medling, to be of a busie humor; or sawcily to intermeddle with, or take too much notice of, the businesses that are, or differences that may be, betweene two neere friends; also, to breed quarrels, make debate, or set diuision, betweene them. I'en mettray le doigt au feu. I am most assured of it; I dare answer for it, or pawne my head on it; I know it is most true. Monstrer au doigt. To shew manifestly, point out euidently, lead one (as it were) by the hand vnto a thing. Mordre les doigts. To chafe, or fret inwardly at a thing which is past helpe, or out of his power to alter. Servy au doigt, & à l'oeil. Serued at a becke. Toucher du bout des doigts. To runne lightly,