Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/849

 Sanglot. Looke Senglot. Sanglot de sang. A lumpe, or clot of congealed, or cluttered bloud.

Sanglotin: m. A Boare-pig, or, a little wild Boare.

Sanglotter. To yex, or hickock; also, to sob often.

Sanglout. Looke Senglot. Sanglure: f. A girding.

Sang-meslé: m. ée: f. Whose bloud is stirred, whose colour comes and goes, through a great, or sudden feare, &c.

Sang-mesleure: f. A disturbing, or stirring of the bloud; a comming and going of colour, by reason of a great, or sudden feare.

Sangoy. as much (in rusticall French) as Sang de Dieu. Sangreal. Part of Christs most pretious bloud wandering about the world inuisible (to all but chast eyes) and working many wonders, and wonderfull cures; if we may credit the most foolish, and fabulous Historie of King Arthur.

Sangsuë: f. A Horsleech, a bloud-sucker.

Sangsuër. To sucke bloud like a Horsleech.

Sanguificatif: m. iue: f. Bloud making, turning into bloud.

Sanguifier. To conuert, or turne into bloud.

Sanguin: m. The purple shrub called Hounds-tree, Hounds-berrie tree, Dog-berrie tree, Gaten or Gater tree.  Sanguin blanc. The white barren, or fruitlesse Priuet.  Sanguin noir. Our ordinarie Priuet, whose ripe berrie is blacke; or (as Macaleb) Pomander Priuet, whose berrie hath a shining blacke hue.  Sanguin rouge. as Sanguin. Sanguin: m. ine: f. Sanguine, bloudie, red; of a sanguine complexion; full of bloud.

Sanguinaire: f. Centinodie, Swines-grasse, Knot-grasse, Birds tongue, S. Innocents hearbe.

Sanguinaire: com. Bloudie, gorie, red; bloud-thirstie, cruell.

Sanguine: f. The bloud-stone wherewith Cutlers doe sanguine their hilts.  Sanguine noire. A certaine scalie, and yron-coloured stone, of the kind of bloud-stones.

Sanguineral: m. The little fish called a Mennow.

Sanguinité: f. Consanguinitie, kindred, parentage, affinitie, neereneße of bloud.

Sanguinolent: m. ente: f. Sanguinolent, bloudie, full of bloud.

Sanguisorbe: f. Burnet, Pimpinell.

Sanicle: com. Sinicle, Sanikell, Selfe heale.  Sanicle femelle. Blacke Maisterwort, or the Dioscorides his blacke Hellebore; called (vntruely) by the vulgar, Pellitorie of Spaine.  Celuy qui sanicle a de mire affaire il n'a: &, Qui a du bugle, & du Sanicle, fait au Chirurgien la nique: Pro. (So great is the vertue, and operation of this hearbe in the closing, and curing of wounds.

Saniclet: m. as Sanicle. Sanie: f. Matter; corrupt, or filthie bloud; or, more properly, the serositie, or waterishnesse of bloud, or of other humors; and, the waterie excrement thats yeelded by vlcers, and bred of the same cause.  Sanie des oreilles. Eare-wax.

Sanieux: m. euse: f. Matterie, corrupt; yeelding, or full of, a filthie moisture.

Saninier. Looke Savinier.

Sannier: m. A Salter; Salt-seller; Salt-maker. Sans. Sanse, without, besides.  C'est mon homme sans autre. Tis the same man I looked for, it is none but he.  Passe sans flux. Passe, I am not flush; also, let goe, no matter, not a pinne matter.

Sansonet: m. The bird called a Starling, or Stare; also, a little, or prettie and tunable, fart.

Sansonnet. The same.

Sansuë: f. The water-worme called a Horsleech, or Bloud-sucker.

Santal. as Sandal. Santé: f. Health, welfare, soundnesse of bodie: In Xainc*-tonge they vse to giue Prawnes vnto diseased persons, and thereupon tearme them, De la Santé. De grande maladie vient on bien en grande santé: Prov. Much comfort after many crosses; long sicknesse often breeds a lasting health.  Mal dessus mal n'est pas santé: Prov. Ayle vpon ill cannot be health.  Point ne faut demander de malade s'il veut santé: Prov. Aske not a sicke man if he would be sound; make not a question of things questionlesse; doubt not of that which is alreadie resolued.  Qui n'a santé il n'a rien, qui a santé il a tout: Pro. He that hath health, hath all things, he that wants it, nothing.

Santonique: f. Wormeseed; the seed of holie Worme-*wood, or Wormeseed-wort.

Sanuës blanches. The white wild Colewort.

Sanut. as Canus. Sanxi: m. ie: f. Decreed, ordained, enacted, established, ratified; also, forbidden.

Sanxion: f. An Act, Law, decree, Statute, Ordinance.

Sanye: f. Looke Sanie. Saon: m. A challenge of, or exception against, a witnesse, Juror, &c.

Saonier: m. A Salter, one that selleth salt.

Saonné: m. ée: f. Challenged, or excepted against.

Saonnement: m. A challenging, or excepting against.

Saonner. To challenge, or except against, a witnesse, Juror, &c.

Saoul: m. A glut, sacietie, fullneße.

Saoul: m. saoule: f. Full, glutted, cloyed, saciated, that hath so much of a thing as he is readie to loath it.  Le Pigeon saoul trouve les cerises ameres: Prov. The full-stuft maw findes bitternesse in sweet things.  Qui a la pance pleine il luy semble que tous les autres sont saouls: Prov. He thats full-bellied thinkes all others full.

Saoulé: m. ée: f. Glutted, saciated, filled, cloyed with.

Saoulement: m. A glutting, filling, saciating, cloying with.

Saouler. To glut, cloy, fill, saciate, giue a gorgefull of.  On se saoule bien de manger tartes: Pro. One may well glut himselfe (or, soone haue ynough) in eating Tarts.

Saouleté: f. Sacietie, fulnesse, a cloying, glutting, loathing, loathsomenesse.

Saoulure: f. The same.

Sap. Bois de sap. Deale planke, Deale boords.

Sape. Looke Sabe. Sapé; & Saper. Looke Sappé; &, Sapper. Saphene. The mother veine; runnes ouer th' inner ankle vnto th' instap, and thence to the great toe.

Saphiques: f. Saphicks, or Saphicke verses (of eleuen sillables.)

Saphir: m. A Saphir stone; also, a bud, or blew pimple on any part of the face.