Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/366

 Enjoler. as Enjauler. To deceiue, or besot with faire words.

Enjolivement: m. Neatnesse, finenesse, comelinesse, handsomenesse, gallantnesse, curiositie (in attire.)

Enjoliver. To decke, adorne, pranke, trim; to make neat, fine, gallant, handsome.

Enjoliveure: f. A decking, pranking, trimming; attiring; also, an attire.

Enjolleur: m. as Enjauleur. Enjonché: m. ée: f. Strewed, bedecked, or set out, with greene rushes, fresh hearbes, or prettie flowers.

Enjoncher. To strew, imbellish, or deck; as with greene rushes, prettie flowers, fresh hearbes.

Enjoüé: m. ée: f. Chuffie, full-cheeked, swolne-cheeked; also, lecherous, lasciuious, wanton; blithe, iocond, frolicke.

Enioyallier. To beiewell; to decke, furnish, inrich, with iewels.

Enjuvencé: m. ée: f. Made young, or youthfull.

Enjuvencer. To make youthfull, young, lustie, frolicke.

Enixe: com. Earnest, indeuoring, labouring hard.

Enlacé: m. ée: f. Snarled, intangled, insnared.

Enlacer. To snarle, intangle, insnare.

Enlaidi: m. ie: f. Growne foule, ouglie, illfauored, filthie, sluttish, disfigured, out of fauour.

Enlaidir. To make foule, ouglie, illfauored; to disfigure, defile, distaine.

Enlaidissant. Disfiguring, defiling, making foule.

Enlaidissement: m. A disfiguring, or defiling; a making foule, ouglie, loathsome to the eye.

Enlanguagé. Bien en. An eloquent, or well spoken man.

Enlassé: m. ée: f. Hard-knit, strait-bound; also, insnarled, intangled.

Enlassement: m. A strait knitting, or binding; also, an intangling, insnarling, insnaring.

Enlevé. Swollen; lifted, raised vp; also, conueyed, or caried away.  Imagette enlevée. A small imbossed image.

Enlevement: m. A lifting, raising, or heauing vp; also, a conueying, or carrying away.

Enlever. To lift, heaue, raise vp; also, to take, conuey, or carrie away (by force &c.)

Enleveure: f. as Enlevement; a swelling, rising, puffing, raising vp of.  Enleveure d'un os. An extraordinarie, and vnnaturall swelling of a bone in any part thereof.

Enlié: m. ée: f. Bound, or knit vp together.

Enlier. To bind, or knit vp together.

Enlignagé. Bien en. Of a good kinred, very well allyed, of a great house.

Enlissé: m. ée: f. Smoothed, sleeked.

Enlisseure: f. A smoothing, or sleeking; Seeke Parer. Enlourdi: m. ie: f. Growne dull, sottish, lumpish, heauie-headed, lob-like.

Enluminé: m. ée: f. Cleered, brightened, inlightened, illuminated; sleeked, burnished; also, limned.  Visage enluminé. The flusht, or fierie countenance of one that hath taken, or vses to take, a pot too much.

Enluminer. To illuminate, inlighten, cleere, brighten, illustrate; also to sleeke, or burnish; also, to limne.

Enlumineur de livres. A burnisher of bookes; (we call one that coloureth, or painteth vpon, Paper, or Parchement, an Alluminer.)

Enlumineure: f. A burnishing, or sleeking; also, a limning.

Ennasin. Belonging to the nose. Ennassé: m. ée: f. Intrapped, inclosed, imprisoned, or caught, as fish in a weele.

s'Ennasser. To be inthralled, imprisoned, intrapped, inclosed, or caught, as fish in a weele, (which is easily entred, but hardly got out of.)

Ennazé: m. ée: f. Put on the nose.

Ennazer. To put on the nose.

Enneigé. Full of snow.

Ennelé. Iambes ennelées. Baker-legs.

Ennemi: m. An enemie, a foe, an aduersarie.  Il n'est nuls petis ennemis: Pro. No enemie can be tearmed little: the least enemie is too great for him that loueth peace.  Qui passe vn iour d'hyuer; il passe vn de ses ennemis mortels: Pro. Looke Passer. Ennemie: f. A shee-foe.

Ennicroché: m. ée: f. Hooked, intangled, inwrapped, or wrought one within another. ¶Rab. Enniellé. Blasted, as corne, &c.

s'Ennieller. Corne, vines, or fruits, to be blasted.

Ennobli: m. ie: f. Ennobled, nobilitated, made noble, made a gentleman (most properly meant of one that hath bought his Gentrie of the French King, who makes many such Gentlemen when he wants money.)

Ennoblir. To ennoble, nobilitate, make noble.

Ennoblissement: m. An ennobling, nobilitating, making noble, or of gentle bloud.

Ennoirci: m. ie: f. Blacked, growne blacke, made blacke.

Ennoircir. To blacke; to make blacke; also, to wax blacke.

Ennombré: m. ée: f. Enumerated, numbred out; told, or counted ouer.

Ennombrer. To enumerate, or number out; to tell, or count ouer.

Ennossé. Almost choaked with a bone; Seeke Enossé. Ennoüé: m. ée: f. Tyed vp, or on a knot.

Ennoüer. To make a knot, or ty on a knot.

Ennoye: f. A certaine venemous worme, which going both wayes, and hauing (as a ground-worme) her head, and tayle of one bignesse, is said to haue two heads.

Ennuagé: m. ée: f. Ouerclouded, ouershadowed with a cloud.

Ennuager. To ouercloud; or ouershadow, as with a cloud.

s'Ennuër. To wax cloudie, as the skie before ill weather.

Ennuicté: m. ée: f. Benighted; turned into night.

Ennuicter. To benight, make night, turne into night; Looke Anuicter. Ennuicti: m. ie: f. Benighted.

Ennuy: m. Annoy; vexation, trouble, disquiet, molestation; sorrow, griefe, anguish; wearisomenesse, tediousnesse, irkesomenesse; importunitie; a loathing, or sacietie, of; a discontentment, or offence, at.

Ennuyé: m. ée: f. Annoyed; vexed, disquieted, molested, grieued, afflicted; wearied, loathed, ouer-much importuned; offended at, or discontented with.

Ennuyer. To annoy; vex, trouble, disquiet, molest; discontent, grieue, afflict, offend; wearie, loath, irke, distast; importune ouer-much.

Ennuyeux: m. euse: f. Troublesome, displeasing, offensiue; grieuous; loathsome, wearisome, tedious, irksome; distastfull; most importunate.  Les mauvais Musiciens ne sont iamais ennuyeux à eux mesmes. Harsh voices neuer are vnpleasing to themselues; or, men seldome grow wearie of their owne iarring.

Enny. as Ennoye.