Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/914

 Tige: f. The staulke, or stemme of an hearbe; also, the maine stocke of a Familie, or Pettigree; whence;  Tant que tige fait souche elle ne branche iamais. As long as there be any heires of an elder Prince of the bloud, the younger cannot haue the Crowne.

Tigette: f. A little staulke, or stemme.

Tigname. Red Stirax; an aromaticall Indian wood vsed by Perfumers.

Tigne. as Teigne. Tigneux Looke Teigneux. Tignon: m. A scurfe, or scalineße of the skin.

Tigre: m. A Tiger.  Ialoux comme vn tigre. Extreamely iealous; (for so is that beast reported to be.)

Tigreau: m. A young, or little Tiger.

Tigresque: com. Tiger-like; fierce, cruell, violent, swift, sauage.  Accoustré à la tigresque. Horribly beaten or bescratched, cruelly handled.

Tigresse: f. A Tigreße, a she Tiger.

Tigrin: m. ine: f. Of a Tiger; like a Tiger; cruell, fierce, violent, swift.

Tigrique: com. as Tigrin. Til: m. The Line, Linden, or Teylet tree; Seeke Tillet. Tiles. The small moats of dust appearing, and wauing vp and downe, in the Sunne-beames which come into a roome at the crannies, or holes of walls, &c.

Tilet: m. A ticket, billet, or little note.

Tilier: m. as Tillet; the Linden tree.

Tillac: m. The Orelop, or Arloup; or, more generally, the hatches of a ship.

Tillaquer. To boord, or floore the Orelop of a ship.

Tille: f. The rinde, or pilling of Hempe, &c; also, the fruit of the Linden tree; also, a kind of Wimble.

Tillé: m. ée: f. Pilled, or shaled, as Hempe.

Tiller. To pill, or shale Hempe.

Tillet: m. The Line, Linden, or Teylet tree; also, a ticket, billet, or little note.  Tillet femelle. The female Line tree, called in some places, the broad-leafed Elme.  Tillet masle. The male Line tree; the timber whereof is yellowish, and more knottie, hard, and substantiall, then that of the female, which is whitish, plaine, smooth, and soft in the handling and cutting.

Tilleul. as Til. Tilleux: m. euse: f. Knobbie, scalie, rough, rugged.

Tillier: m. The Linden tree.

Tiltre: m. A tittle; a small line drawne ouer an abridged word, to supply the letters wanting; also, a title, or inscription; also, a title, name, surname, or addition of dignitie; also, a title vnto land, &c; also, an Euidence, Deed, or Jnstrument, of Purchase, &c; also, a brace of dogs layed in a place to be let slip at a Deere as he passeth by; also, the rate, value, or degree of goodnesse of gold, and siluer; the highest of the first being 24 graines, and of the second 12 d; but to be wrought by Gold-*scribes, &c, at 23 graines three quarters the one, and tr d 10 graines the other.

Timble. A Coat-armor, or coat of Armor; or as Tymbre; (an old word.)

Timbon. A kind of brasen Drumme.

Timbre: m. A Colledge-bell; or the Hall-bell of a Colledge, or Cloister; also, the bell of a little Clocke; also, a great Tub; also, the stone bason, trough, or vessell at the foot of a Fountaine; also, the creast, or cognisance, thats borne vpon the helmet of a coat of Armes: This in the opinion of our Blasonners, who call it a Timber, and deriue it from the Germane Timmer; whereunto Ni-*
 * cot seemes agreeable, as to the sence, in his, Timbre qu'on met sus vn Heaulme; and Vigenere vpon Liuie, in his, Il portoit au timbre de son cabasset vne figure de poisson; yet L'Oiseau, a late, and learned writer, appropriates it (in his Booke des Ordres onely to the Helmet.   Vn timbre de Martres. A certaine quantitie, or number, of Martins skins.

Timbré. Armoiries timbrées. Timbered, creasted; adorned with a creast, or with a mantle, helme, creast, &c; or (onely) insigned with an Helmet.  Cerveau mal timbré. An idle, ignorant, or ill-furnished braine; a wit that wanteth fit, or due ornaments.

Timbrer. To timber; to creast; to furnish, or adorne with a creast, or with a mantle, helme, and creast (as one of our latest Blasoners expounds it,) or (onely) to garnish, or insigne it with an helmet.

Timide: com. Timerous, fearefull, awfull, bashfull, faint, cowardlie, white-liuered.  La mere du timide ne sçait que c'est de pleurer: Pro. The mother of a fearefull sonne knowes not what tis to weepe.

Timidement. Timorously, fearefully, cowardly, bashfully.

Timidité: f. Timiditie, timorousnesse, fearefullnesse, faintheartednesse, cowardlinesse, bashfullneße.

Timon: m. The beame, or draught tree of a wagon, &c; also, the staffe, or handle (which we call the whip) of the Rudder, or sterne of a ship.

Timoré: m. ée: f. Frighted, skared, put into a feare.

Timpan. Looke Tympan. Timpanisé. Bastiment timp. Hauing a gable-end.

Timper. To tingle, to make ring or sound, &c; as Tinter. ¶Rab. Tin: m. Tinne; also, a tinging; whence;  Les oreilles me font tin. Mine eares tingle, or glow.

Tiné: m. A Colestaffe, or Stang; a big staffe whereon a burthen is carried betweene two on their shoulders.

Tine: f. A Stand, open Tub, or Soe, most in vse during the time of Vintage, and holding about foure or fiue paile-*fulls, and commonly borne, by a Stang, betweene two.

Tinée: f. A Stand-full, or Soe-full.

Tinel: m. A household, or familie; also, the roome wherein all the seruants of a familie dine and sup; also, as Tine. Tinet: m. The Whall tearmed a Horlepoole, or Whirle-*poole; also, as Tine. Tinette: f. A little Stand, Soe, or Tub; a bathing tub.

Tiniez: m. Long white rockes lying vnder water in the sea.

Tinne. as Tine. Tinole: f. A little Soe, Tub, Stand, &c.

Tinon: m. A little Soe; a Stand, or small open Tub.

Tintalorisé. Grimme, frowning, froward.

Tintamarre: f. A clashing, or crashing, a rustling or gingling noise, made in the fall of woodden stuffe, or veßels of mettall; also, a blacke Santus; the lowd wrangling or iangling outcryes of scoulds, or scoulding fellowes; any extreame or horrible dinne.

Tintamarré: m. ée: f. Crashing, gingling; wrangling, iangling; extreame-dinne-making.

Tinté. Tinged, tingled, rung, resounded; towled.

Tintement: m. A tinging, ringing, tingling; towling; resounding, cleere-sounding.

Tinter. To ting, ring, tingle; to towle; to resound, or sound cleere.  Les oreilles me tintent. Mine eares tingle, or glow.

Tinthimal. as Tithymale.