Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/496

 Gorge: f. The throat, or gullet, (most properly) the bottome of the mouth; or, the most deepe, and inward part thereof; in a woman, the outward, and vpper part of the breast, betweene the necke and pappes; also, the gorge, or craw of birds; and, a meale, or gorgefull giuen vnto birds (especially Hawkes)  Gorge droicte. in Architecture; as Nasselle. Gorge renversée. A gullet reuerst, or an Ogee.  Gorge-rouge. A Robin-red-breast.  Ietter le feu par la gorge. To fume, chafe, take on extreamely, play terrible reakes.  Passer le pied sur la gorge à. Looke Passer. Rendre sa gorge. To cast, vomit, spue.  Rire soubs gorge. To laugh in his sleeue.  Tenir le pied sur la gorge à vn. To haue one at his mercie, his throat vnder his feet; his necke vnder his girdle.  Voler sur la gorge. To exercise, or labour hard, on a full stomacke.

Gorgé: m. ée: f. Gorged, crammed, filled with.

Gorgée de vin. A gulpe, or swallow; as much wine as one lets downe his throat at once.

Gorgément. Vp to the throat.

Gorger. s'en gorger de viandes. To gormandize it, or full-gorge himselfe, to eat vntill his bellie cracke.

Gorgerette: f. A Gorget, Mocket, Bib, or breast-*cloth.

Gorgerin: m. A Gorget of maile; also, a Carkanet (worne ouerthwart the breast) also, the necke-peece, or coller, of a garment; and sometimes the necke, or throat it selfe; and hence;  Il est bien vuidé du gorgerin. He hath a goodlie wide throat, or swallow.

Gorgerin. (in Architecture) is a small round member, accompanied with a square one, in the foot, or bottome of the Chapter of a Piller, &c; a small Boultell (with a fillet vnder it) in the Chapter of a Piller, &c.

Gorgerin: m. ine: f. Of, or belonging to, the throat.  Escrouelles gorgerines. The Kings euill (in the throat.)

Gorge-rouge. A Robin-red-breast.

Gorgette. A prettie little throat, or mouth.

Gorgias: m. as Gorgerette; A Gorget. Gorgias: m. ase: f. Gorgeous, gaudie, flaunting, braue, gallant, gay, fine, trimme; quaintly clothed, richly attired, sumptuously apparelled; also, glorying, delighting, or pleased, in brauerie; also, feeding, or batling with mirth.

Gorgiasement. Gorgeously, gaudily, gayly, gallantly.

se Gorgiaser. To flaunt, braue, or gallantize it; to cut it out of the whole peece; also, to be proud of, or please himselfe in, the brauerie of his apparell.

Gorgiaseté: f. Brauerie, gallantnesse, finenesse, trimnesse, gorgeousneße, gaudinesse.

Gorme: f. The thicke humor which young horses void at their narrells, or by the ouerture made vnder their throat; some call it the Strangles.

Gormette. as Gourmette. Gorre: f. A Sow; (also, the French Pockes; ¶Norm.) also, brauerie, gallantnesse, gorgeousnesse, pompe, magnificence, sumptuousneße.  Femmes à la grande gorre. Huffing or flaunting wenches; costlie or statelie dames.

Gorreau: m. as Gorret; Also, the thread, or quantitie, of flax, &c, thats drawne, at once, from a distaffe, in spinning.

Gorrerie: f. Gallanterie, brauerie, sumptuousnesse in apparell, statelinesse of gesture; also, pride, vaunting, vaineglorie.

Gorret: m. A little Sheat, or Barrow-pig.  Poisson, gorret, & cochin, vie en l'eau & mort en vin: Prov. (Such flegmaticke meates requiring much wine to be drunke with them.)

Gorrette: f. A cap; also, a iustle, iurre; thumpe, or thwacke.

Gorrier: m. ere: f. as Gorgias; or (more then it) gallant both in apparell, carriage, and gesture; also, proud, braggard, vaunting, vaineglorious. Gorrierement. Brauely, gaudily, gallantly; proudly, vainegloriously.

Gorron: m.: A Sheat, or little yong hog.

Gort: f. A weare in a running water; or, as Gourt. Gosaran. A necklace, carkanet, border; an ornament for the bosome, or necke.

Goscoté. See Coscoté. Gosier: m. The throat; and (most properly) that part of it which makes the head of the Larinx.  Le mal de gosier. The Squinancie, or Squinzie:

Gossampine: f. The Bumbast, or Cotton-bush; the plant that beares Cotton, or Bumbast.

Gosse: f. as Gousse; Also, a scoffe, gibe, flowt. Gosse d'aulx. A cloue of Garlicke:

Gossé: m. ée: f. Mocked, flowted, scoffed at; boorded with.

Gosser. To gibe; deride, mocke, flowt, scoffe at; boord, or ieast with.

Gosserie: f. Mockerie, scoffing, flowting, gibing.

Gosseur: m. A scoffer, mocker, flowter, giber, ieaster.

Gotereux. as Goitreux. Gothique: com. Gothlike; rude, cruell, barbarous.

Goton: m. in stead of Groton; A little grot.

Goualon. as Goalon. Gouasche. A kind of Partridge; as Goasche. Goubeau. as Gobeau. Goubelet. as Gobelet; Also, a kind of little round pie resembling our Chuet. Goubelettes: f. Little vessells of tinne made like goblets, but without feet; vsed by Juglers, & Inchaunters.

Gouber: m. An aunders-meat, or afternoones repast.

Goude: f. A Marigold.

Goudeau. as Godeau. Planter au goudeau. as Planter à la barre; See Barre. Goud-fallot. A boone companion, a good fellow: ¶Rab. Goudiveau: m. A kind of open Pie, made of minced veale, butter, hearbs, and spice, baked together, and afterwards hard yolks of egs put on the top of it; also, a figure in caruing, like that pie; or, a long painted Ouall.

Goudronné: m. ée: f. Set (stiffe) as a ruffe; also, pitched, or tighted, as a ship; See Goderonné. Goudronner. To set a ruffe; also, to pitch, trimme, or tight a ship: See Goderonner. Goueastre: m. as Goitreux; That hath a wen, bunch, or swelling, vnder his throat. Gouest. The name of a fruitfull vine, whose wood is of a tawnie colour.

Gouët: m. A kind of little short knife, wherewith in France the boyes cracke nuts, and pill greene wallnuts; a little cut-purse knife.

Gouët. faulcon gouët; Whose feathers are ill marked, mailed, or coloured; we call such a one, a dropt Hawke.

Gouffre: m. A gulfe; whirlepoole, deepe hole, or vnmeasurable depth (of waters) that swallowes vp whatsoeuer approaches, or comes into, it.