Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/714

 Perduellisme: m. Treason against Prince, or Countrey.

Perdurable: com. Perdurable, perpetuall, euerlasting, aye-during.

Perdurablement. Perpetually, euerlastingly, for euer.

Pere: m. A father; also, an auncient Monke, or Frier, especially if he be a Confessor; also, a Iesuite, or the Title of a Iesuite.  Beau pere. Looke Beaupere. Hommes, & peres de la Cour. as Pairs. Ils sont à table aises comme peres. (Whose bellies being filled their greatest care is taken.)  À pere, à maistre, à Dieu tout puissant, nul ne peut rendre l'equivalent: Prov. No man can doe ynough for his father, maister, and Maker.  À pere amasseur fils gaspilleur: Pro. A warie father hath a wastfull sonne; The like is;  De pere gardien fils garde-rien: Pro. Celuy là est bien pere qui nourrit: Prov. He that doth feed, or foster me, may well be called my father.

Peré: m. Perrie; drinke made of Peares.

Peregrin: m. A stranger, forrainer, alien, outlander, or outlandish man.

Peregrin: m. ine: f. Peregrine, forraine, alien, stranger, outlandish.  Faulcon peregrin. A paßenger.

Peregrination: f. A peregrination, farre iourney, long trauell, pilgrimage.

Peregriner. To trauell, take long iourneyes, wander in strange countries, goe on pilgrimage.

Peregrineux: m. euse: f. as Peregrin. Peregrinité: f. Strangenesse, outlandishnesse, forraineneße, forraine speech, habit, custome, behauior, &c.

Peremption d'instance. A Nonsuite, or letting a suit fall; a quitting, or forsaking of a cause.

Peremptoire, & decisif du procez. A peremptorie rule which determines a cause.

Peremptoire: com. Peremptorie, insulting, imperious; absolute; forcible; earnest, that will haue no nay; also, present, sudden.  Adjournement peremptoire. A peremptorie summons, after which no day will be giuen, but the cause forthwith proceeded in.

Peremptoirement. Peremptorily, imperiously; earnestly; absolutely; presently, suddenly, without further delay.

Peremptorisé. Heritage peremptorisé. Whose challengers, hauing after summons made default, are no more admitted to prosecute, or continue their claime.

Peremptoriser. To peremptorise; to grant, or passe away peremptorily; or (as in Peremptorisé) to exclude a challenger after a default made by him. Perenne: com. Perpetuall, continuall, endlesse, ay-during, without ceasing, euerlasting.  Eau perenne. Continually running, neuer drie.

Perennel: m. elle: f. as Perenne. Perenniser. To perpetuate, eternize, make euerlasting.

Perennité: f. Perennitie, eternitie, perpetuitie, euerlastingnesse.

Perequant: m. An equall rater, taxer, assessor of others; or, one that gathers head-money.

Perequant: m. ante: f. Equalling; also, rating equally.

Perequation: f. A perequation; an equalling, or making euen; also, an equall rating, taxation, easement.

Perfection: f. Perfection, compleatnesse, accomplishment,absolutenesse; the full ending, or whole finishing, of

Perfectionner. To perfect, or bring to perfection; to ac-* *complish, end wholly, finish absolutely.

Perfigue: f. A Peare-plumme.

Perfiguier: m. A Peare-plumme tree.

Perflable: com. Which may be blowne through.

Perfoliate: f. Through-wax, through-leafe; (an hearb.)

Perforatif: m. iue: f. Boring, piercing, or thrusting through.

Perfumé: m. ée: f. Perfumed, sweetened throughly.

Perfumement: m. A perfuming.

Perfumer. To perfume, sweeten throughly, or giue a sweet sent vnto.

Perfumeur: m. A Perfumer.

Perfums: m. Perfumes, pleasant fumes, delicate smels, gracious odors.

Perger. To proceed, or goe on.

Pergude. Perished, lost: ¶Gasc. Peri: m. ie: f. Perished, lost, gone; abolished, annulled, spoyled.  Peris en croix, en face, ou en pal, &c. In Crosse, in Fesse, in Pale, &c; a tearme of Blazon.

Periapte. A medecine hanged about any part of the bodie.

Pericarde: m. The membrane, filme, or slender skinne wherein the heart is wrapped.

Pericardique: com. Of, or belonging to, the Pericardium; whence, Veine pericardique: Looke Veine. Pericharie: f. Excessiue ioy.

Periclimene; ou, Periclymene. The Woodbind, or Honie-suckle.

Pericliter. To ieopard, hazard, endanger.

Pericraine: m. The Pericranion, hairie scaulpe, whole skinne of the scull.

Perier: m. The giserne of a Henne, &c.

Perigée: m. The point of heauen wherein any Planet is neerest vnto the center of the earth.

Peril: m. Perill, danger, ieopard, hazard.  Tout ce que gist en peril n'est pas perdu: Pro. All is not lost thats in some hazard.

Periller. To perish; also, to be in some perill, or hazard.

Perilleusement. Perillously, dangerously.

Perilleux: m. euse: f. Perillous, or parlous, dangerous, ieopardous, hazardous.

Perimer. To spoyle, abolish, ouerthrow, disappoint vtterly, take away wholly.

Perinée: m. The seame, or line that runnes betweene the fundament and cods.

Periode: f. A period, perfect sentence, full sence, conclusion, or end; also, a course to a finishing, or the terme wherein a thing is finished.

Periodic: m. ique: f. Periodicall; ended, finished, concluded; also, reuolutiue, comming or going by course, or fits.

Periodiquement. By periods; endingly, concludingly, or towards a conclusion; also, reuoluingly, by course or fits, or with a continuall, and interchanged course.

Perioste: m. The skinne wherewith the ribs be couered; or (more generally) the thinne skinne wherein any bone is couered.

Peripherée: f. The circumference, edge, or border of a circle, &c.

Periphraser. To paraphrase, vse circumlocutions, expresse one word by many.

Peripneumonie: f. Th' inflamation of the Lungs.

Perir. To perish, miscarrie, die; decay, consume, wither; to come to ruine, or to naught; to be lost, mard, spoild, cast away. Il n'est si bon marinier qui ne perisse: Prov. The skilfull Sea-man comes at length short home.