Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/375

 Toicts ornez d'enterlasseures. Roofes decked with interlaced frets.

Entrelassis: m. An interlacing, plaiting, interweauing.

Entrelié: m. ée: f. Tyed together; bound betweene.

Entrelier. To tie together; to bind betweene.

Entreligne: f. An interline, or interlining.

Entreligné: m. ée: f. Interlined.

Entreligner. To interline (a writing.)

Entrelire. To read together.

s'Entrelouër. To commend one another.

Entreluicter. To wrastle one with another.

Entreluire. To appeare, shine, or be seene among, betweene, or in the middest of; also, to giue a glimpse, or shine by halfe.

Entrelunaires. Iours en. The dayes, or space, wherein neither the old, nor new Moone is seene.

Entremander. To send betweene partie and partie.

s'Entremanger. To eat vp, or vndoe, each other.

Entrement: m. An entring, or going in; a beginning, an entrance.

Entremeslé: m. ée: f. Interlaced, intermixed, intermingled; set, inserted, mingled among.

Entremesler. To intermingle, interlace, intermix; to shuffle vp one with another; to insert, or set among.  s'Entremesler de. To Intermeddle with; to imbark, or put, himselfe into.

Entremets: m. Certaine choice dishes serued in between the courses at a feast, or banquet.

Entremetteur: m. A stickler, mediator, dayes-man; an intermedler, or dealer in other mens causes, or controuersies.

Entremettre la besongne. To intermit, slacken, deferre, iscontinue, delay, put, or leaue it off for a time.  s'Entremettre de. To meddle, or deale with; to thrust himselfe into.

s'Entremeurir. To wax, or be, halfe ripe.

s'Entremignarder. To dandle, cocker, or flatter, one another.

Entremise: f. A meanes, or mediation; an intermedling, or brokage; a dealing betweene partie and partie; any medling in, or managing of, (other mens) businesses.

s'Entremocquer. To interchange mocks, gibes, quips, scoffs, flouts; to ride, or deride, one another.

s'Entremordre. To bite one another.

s'Entremouiller. To wet, bedeaw, besprinkle, moisten, each other.

Entremoyen: m. A distance, intermedium, meane, or meane while.

s'Entrempescher. To disturbe, or hinder one another.

Entre-mutiner. To put into a mutinie; to set together by th' eares.

Entremuye de moulin. The mill hopper.

Entremy par en. Amongst, or in the middest of.

Entrenaistre. To spring vp, arise, be borne, betweene, or among.

s'Entrenavrer. To wound each other.

Entrenoüé: m. ée: f. Interlaced, intangled; tied, or knotted betweene; also, swumme betweene, or among.

Entrenouër. To swimme betweene, or among; also, to intangle, or tie knots betweene.

s'Entrenuire. To hurt, endammage; hinder, pester, one another.

s'Entr'injurier. To reuile, or abuse, one another.

s'Entr'obliger. To bind, oblige, or make beholden themselues, one to the other; to enter into mutuall bonds. Entr'obligez. Bound, obliged, beholden, the one to the other.

s'Entr'occir. To kill each other.

Entr'oeil: m. The space betweene the eyes.

Entr'oublié: m. ée: f. Forgotten in the meane while; slipt out of memorie since that time.

Entr'oublier. To forget in the meane while, or since then.  s'Entr'oublier. To forget each other. Entr'ouï: m. ie: f. Heard scatteringly, by halues, or but here and there a word.

Entr'ouïr. To heare by halues; to heare here and there a word; to heare vnto his thinking; or to thinke hee heares.

Entr'ouvert: m. erte: f. Chopped, chawned, clouen, gaping; halfe, or almost open; neither fully shut, nor open; whence;  Les yeux cachez à doigts entr'ouverts. Couered with stradling, and halfe-open, fingers; rather hidden in shew then hindered of their sight; or so hidden by them that the hider may with ease looke through them.

Entr'ouvrir. Halfe to open, to make way throguh; also, to lay (halfe) open vnto.

s'Entr'ouvrir. Halfe, or almost to open, to gape, cleeue, goe asunder of it selfe.

s'Entrepardonner. To forgiue one another.

Entreparlement. An interrupting, a speaking in a mans cast.

Entreparler. To interrupt one that speakes; to speake in his tale, to hinder his speech, with demaunds.

Entrepas: m. A fast walke, a racke; a racking, or great pace of some horses, that cannot amble, and must not trot.

Entrepend: m. Part of a womans &c.

s'Entrepicquer. To pricke, nip, taunt, quip, cut, each other.

s'Entrepigner. To combe, or claw one another; to pluck one another by the beards; to goe together by the ears.

Entreplanter. To plant, or set betweene.

Entreplié: m. ée: f. Interfoulded, or foulded between.

Entreplier. To fould betweene, to interfould.

s'Entrepoindre. To pricke, sting, nettle; gird, gall, or vex, one another.

Entrepos: m. An interposition; or, thing thats put, in an equall distance betweene others; also, a setting, putting, laying.

Entreposer. Seeke Interposer. Entreposition. as Interposition. s'Entrepoulser. To thrust out the harlot; to thrust, or push one another.

s'Entrepoussans. Thrusting, or crowding one another.

Entreprenant. Enterprising, attempting; bold, hardie, couragious, forward, aduenturous; that cares as little for his flesh as another,

Entreprendre. To enterprise, attempt, vndertake, or take in hand; assume, or take vpon him; to venter vpon, enter into, goe in hand with; also, to vsurpe, or incroach vpon.  s'Entreprendre. To congeale, curdle, thicken; knit, or ioyne together.  s'Entreprendre par les mains. To shake hands, to ioyne hands together.

Entrepreneur. An enterpriser; attempter, vndertaker; also, a Broker, Pettifogger, or intermedler in other mens contruersies.  Marchand entrepreneur. A Marchant venturer.

Entrepressé. Closed, crowded, thrust, pressed in, or, one betweene another.