Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/913

 a day for the Kings extraordinarie, and idle expences.  Thresoriers ordinaires (ou de l'ordinaire) des guerres. The Paymaisters for the Gensdarmerie. Thresorier des parties casuelles. The Threasurer for all such moneyes as be raised by the sale of Offi-   Aujourd'huy thresorier demain tresarriere: Prov. Looke Tresarriere. Thresorillon: m. A little threasure.

Thriacle: m. Treacle; See Theriaque. Thriacleur: m. A maker, or seller of Treacle; also, a Mountebanke, Impostor, Drug-seller, Quack-saluer.

Thriaque. as Theriaque. Thringle. Looke Tringle. Thrombes de sang. Clots, or clutters of congealed bloud.

Throne: m. A Throne, a royall Seat.

Thrubal. ¶Rab. A Trumpettor.

Thun: m. The fish called a Tunnie.

Thunine: f. as Thonnine; or, as Tun. Thym: m. The hearbe Time; also, a certaine kernell in the kannell bone of man, or beast; also, a kind of wart within a womans priuities.

Thymbre: f. Winter Sauorie, Pepper Hysop.

Thymbrée: f. Fish-Mint, Water-Mint, Brooke-Mint; and (by some) also, Balsamint, or Balme-Mint.

Thymelée: f. Spurge-Flax, mountaine Widow-wayle.

Thymique. Veine thy. Looke Veine. Thymoxalme. A composition of Time, Pennyryall, Rue, dry barlie meale, salt, water, and vineger; good against the gowt, ventosities, and weakenesse of the stomacke, and a good euacuator of große, and blacke humors.

Thyn: m. as Thon. Thynnuncule. A little Tunnie fish.

Thyon: m. The Bunting; (a bird.)

Thyphaine. The Twelfth-day in Christmas.

Tiare: f. A round and wreathed Ornament for the head (somewhat resembling the Turkish Turbant) worne, in old time, by the Princes, Priests, and women of Persia.

Tiburon: m. A kind of sea-Calfe, in the Jndian sea.

Tichous: m. Little cakes made of egges, and flower, with a little butter (and sometimes cheese among) eaten ordinarily with sugar and Rosewater.

Ticq: m. as Tiquet; (in the last sence.)

Ticque torche lorgne. Voices or words, whereby, as by our thwicke thwacke, &c, a beating, or cuffing with the fists, &c, is expressed.

Ticquet. as Tiquet. Tictac. Ticke-tacke, a Game at Tables.

Tie. as Tede. Tiede: com. Luke-warme, neither hot nor cold, betweene hot and cold; also, faint, slow, remisse, or backward in a matter.

Tiedéer. as Tieder. Tiedement. Luke-warmely; faintly, backwardly.

Tieder. To warme, to make luke-warme, put some warmth into, giue a little heat vnto.

Tiedeté: f. Warmenesse, luke-warmenesse.

Tiedeur: f. Warmth; also, moistnesse, or moist warmth.

Tiedi: m. ie: f. Warmed, a little heated; also, bathed in, or bedewed with, teares.

Se Tiedir. To wax warme, grow luke-warme; also, to bath, or bedew, himselfe in teares.

Tien: m. enne: f. Thine, belonging to thee.

Tien-main: m. A stay for the hand along the wall of a staire.

Tiens-le-bien: m. A Crians; the long lune or line which is tyed vnto a Hawkes leg, to keepe her from flying away at her first luring.

Tierçage: m. A third earing, tilth, or culture of ground.

Tierce: f. The 24 part of a Seconde; a maruellous little, (and the least) weight vsed by Jewellers.

Tierce. L'heure des tierces. The second quarter, or third houre, of the artificiall day; in Summer eight of the clocke, in Winter tenne.

Tierce. whence, Fievre tierce. A tertian ague; Looke Tiers, whereof this is the feminine.

Tiercé: m. ée: f. Ploughed, or eared the third time; also, raised, or increased a third part euerie yeare.  Tiercé de. Jn the third place; (a tearme of Blason.)  Paroles tiercées. Broken or vnperfect language, disiointed speeches, halfe words.

Tiercelet: m. The Tassell, or male of any kind of Hawke, so tearmed, because he is, commonly, a third part leße then the female.  Vn tiercelet de Iob. An exceeding patient man.

Tiercelin: m. Sarcenet.

Tiercelin. Plomb tiercelin. Lead mingled a third part with white and fine, the other two with course and blacke, stuffe.

Tiercement: m. A third ploughing, or earing; also, an adding of a third part vnto a summe; or the rising, or increasing a third in value euerie yeare; also, a certaine inferior officer in a ship, &c.

Tiercement. Thirdly.

Tiercer. To plough, till, or eare the ground a third time; also, to rise, or increase a third part in value; as in euerie yeare, from v s the first, to vij s vj d the second, x s the third, &c.  Tiercer le cens. C'est quand pour vingt solz de cens le subject doit au seigneur censuel trente solz pour le profit de cens. ¶Ragueau. Tiercerets: m. Certaine crosse branches on the outside of a vault.

Tiercerons. The same.

Tiercet: m. A Song of triple Stanzoes, or Stanzo of three verses.

Tierciere: f. The veßell, or measure called a Tierce.

Tiers: m. A tierce, third, third part, or thirden-deale; also, as Harle; also, a kind of play somewhat like our Barly-breake.  Tiers en ascendant (in the valuation of Offices) is as much as a halfe; whence, if an Office be worth 2000 pounds, the Tiers en ascendant is held to be 1000 pounds.   Droict de tiers & danger. Looke Danger. Tiers: m. erce: f. Tertian; third, the third.  Droict de tiers denier. Looke Droict. Escheoir, tomber, ou venir, en main tierce. A noble or free Jnheritance, bought by a Roturier, to come by discent vnto a third Roturier (the purchasor being the first, and both he and his next-succeeding heire hauing done homage for it;) Jn which case it may be parted among heires in the same manner as it should haue been, had it continued still in the hands of a Gentleman.

Tiers-pied. as Trepied. Tiers-poinct: m. Voute poinctuë comme à tiers-poinct. Raised a little higher then the hemicicle, or halfe-circle.

Tieu tieu Margot. The voice of countrey people calling their Kine vnto them.

Tieul, for Tel. Such; (an old word.)

Tifé, & Tifer. as Attiffé, & Attiffer.

Tiffer. The same; also, to tifle with the fingers, or busie the hands long about a thing, to the end it may be done well, or to the good liking of him that does it.