Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/696

 two kernels which grow at the end of the bladder, and receiue the seed brought vnto them by Vasa deferentia; also, stones set to, or about, a pillar.

Parastre: m. A step-father, a father in law.

Paravant. Before, heretofore, in former times.

Parc: m. A Parke; a Close, Ground, or Place impaled; also, a Sheepe-fold; also, a Stue, or Fish-pond inclosed.  Vn parc d'arbres. A Copse, or Coppice; an impaled, or inclosed groue of trees.  Chastrer le parc. Looke Chastrer. Parcage: m. A Parke, or Jnclosure; also, an inclosing; also, a soulding (as of Sheepe;) also, a Pound; or as Parchage. Parce que. Because that, for as much as.

Parcelé: m. ée: f. Peecemealed; cut, or made, into parcels.

Parcelle: f. A parcell; particle, peece, little part.  À parcelles. By degrees, by little and little.  Par parcelles. Particularly, by parcels, peecemeale, one peece after another.

Parchage: m. Jmpoundage, or an impounding; also, as Parcage. Parchemin: m. Parchement.  Parchemin innocent. Looke Innocent. Parchemin vierge. Parchement made of an abortiue skinne.

Parcheminerie: f. Parchment-making; also, the street, or place, wherein Parchement is sold.

Parcheminier: m. A Parchement-maker.

Parciere. Terres baillées à par. Let out vnto parts, or for part of their crop.

Parcion. A coparceners portion.

Parcité: f. Parcitie, sparing, scantneße, neereneße; frugalitie, thrift, sauing; niggardlineße.

Parçon. as Parcion. Parçonnier: m. A coheire, or coparcener.

Parcoulé: m. ée: f. Strayned through.

Parcouler. To strayne through.

Parcourir. To runne through.

Parcours: m. Custome, vsage, auncient proceeding in points of commerce betweene the Townes, or Countries of seuerall Lords.  Bourgeois de parcours. Freemen of the Iurisdiction of Sens in the marches of Champaigne, who by a bare challenge may aduow themselues to be also the Kings freemen.

Parcreu. as Parcru. Parcroissant: m. ante: f. Waxing ripe, approaching to perfection; also, growing among.

Parcroistre. To ripen, or make an end of growing; to wax perfect, or come to it full pitch; also, to grow among.

Parcru: m. uë: f. Full-growne, throughly ripe; mellow, flush; come to perfection, or to a full pitch; also, growne, or sprung vp among.

Pardé. as Par Dieu. ¶Poictevin. Pardigoince: f. (The name of) a great, and delicate Plumme.

Pardil. A darke-spotted gray colour of a horse.

Pardon: m. Pardon, forgiuenesse; remission; (Se donne par lettres seellees sur double queuë en cire iaune, & au cas qui requiert punition corporelle autre que de mort. ¶Ragueau.) Wherein it differs from our Pardon some way, and from the French Remission euerie way.) Les pardons. The Popes Pardons.  De grand (ou petit) peché grand (ou petit) pardon: Prov. Great offences need great pardons; little faults are soone forgiuen.

Pardonnable: com. Pardonable, forgiueable.

Pardonné: m. ée: f. Pardoned, forgiuen, remitted.

Pardonnement: m. A pardoning, remitting, forgiuing.

Pardonner. To pardon, forgiue, remit a fault, release a debt, hold excused of.  Pardonne à tous mais a toy point: Pro. Pardon all men but thy selfe; or, pardon other mens offences, but punish thine owne.

Pardonnigere: m. A Pardon bearer; one that carries, and makes sale of, the Popes Pardons, vp and downe a countrey.

Pardonnir. To sleepe soundly, to take a long, or full sleepe; to take his penniworthes of the pillow; or, to finish, or sleepe out, his sleepe.

Pardurable: com. Looke Perdurable. Paré: m. ée: f. Gracefully dressed, dight, arrayed; ordered, or furnished; decked, adorned, garnished; also, hanged with Tapistrie; also, warded, or defended from a blow, &c; and shrowded, or sheltred vnder; also, pared, as the hoofe of a horse.  Pomme parée. Ripened in straw, &c; made mellow by art.  Vin paré. Wine that is fined, Wine thats readie to be drawne, or drunke.  Quand la Messe fut  chantée si fut la dame parée: Prov. By that time Masse was done, her Ladiship was dressed.

Pareade: f. A certaine fierie-coloured, quick-sighted, and wide-mouthed Serpent, not verie venomous.

Pareage. as Parage; (an old word.)

Pareatis. (The Conclusion of a peremptorie Warrant, or Iniunction; like vnto our) Hereof faile ye not, &c.

Pare-coup: m. A ward-blow; or, any thing that serues to keepe off, or put by, a blow.

Parée. Droict de parée. Looke Droict. Parefrenier. as Palfrenier. Pareil: m. A match, or fellow, in Gloues, Cuffes, Shooes, &c.  Qui n'a point son pareil. A paragon; that hath not his match, that hath no peere.

Pareil: m. eille: f. Like, equall, euen, or matching with; mutuall, semblable.  La pareille. Like for like, as much for as much, one for another.  Chasque oüeille cerche sa pareille: Prov. Euerie sheepe her mate doth seeke; fooles take no comfort but in companie.

Pareillement. Likewise, in like manner, semblably, after the same fashion, iust so, euen so, also.

Parelie: f. A false Sunne, or apparance of a Sunne.

Parelle: f. The hearbe Dockes, or the sharpe-pointed Docke; also, Patience, Monkes Rhubarbe; (a kind thereof.)   Parelle grande. The great sharpe-pointed Docke.  Parelle de marais. The great water-Docke, or Sorrell; called also water Sorrell, and horse Sorrell.  Parelle petite. Ditch Docke, the small water Docke.  Parelle pointuë. The (ordinarie) sharpe-pointed Docke.

Parement: m. A decking, tricking, garnishing, adorning; a comelie dressing, a gracefull dighting; handsome furnishing, orderlie arraying; also, Arras, Tapistrie, or any costlie Hangings; also, a warding, or defending, in fight; also, a shrowding, or sheltering vnder; also, a paring (of a horses hoofe;) also, Vne sorte de chair rouge qui vient par dessus la venaison des deux costez du corps d'un cerf.