Queen Anna's New World of Words; or, Dictionarie of the Italian and English Tongues
Part 156
Tenére le máni a cínt[o]la, _to liue or stand idle._
Tenére le máni a sè, _to hould or keepe ones hands to himselfe._
Tenére le óche in pastúra, _to keepe wenches at racke and manger for monie._
Tenére le póste, _to hould stakes or keep play still._
Tenére l'inuít[o], _to hould or accept of ones courtesie being enuited to doe any thing, to take ones offer or bidding. Also to see a vie at any game._
Tenerẻll[o], _somewhat tender or soft. Looke_ Tẻner[o].
Tenére l'ócchi[o] a penẻll[o], _to looke to the pensill, to looke heedily about._
Tenére mán[o], _as_ Tenére il sácc[o].
Tenére memória, _to remember well, to keepe in memory or minde._
Tenére ragi[ó]ne, _to keepe a court of law, right, reason, iustice or sessions._
Tenerézza, _tendernesse, softnesse. Also tender or melting affection._
Tẻneri, _any tendrels. Also all soft-skinned fishes._
Tenerícci[o], _softish, tender, mellow._
Tenerín[o], _somewhat soft or tender._
Teneríre, rísc[o], rít[o], _to mollifie, to soften, to make tender. Also to enmilden._
Tenerità, _as_ Tenerézza.
Tenerít[o], _softned, mollified, made tender._
Teneritúdine, _tendernesse, softnesse._
Tẻner[o], _soft, tender. Also pliant or easily induced to any thing. Also yoong, gentle, milde, nice, delicate or effeminate._
Tener[ó]ne lung[ó]ne, _a long stripling, a tender tall lad, a slangrell boy._
TEN
Tenérsi, _a man to containe or hold himselfe fast, a man to hould or esteeme himselfe._
Tenérsi huóm[o], _to hould or repute himselfe a man._
Tenerúme, _the soft braune, pithinesse or fleshinesse of any thing._
Tenerúme dell'[o]récchie, _the flap of ones eares._
Tenesm[ó]ne, _as_ Tenasm[ó]ne.
Téngere, _as_ Tíngere, _to die, to staine._
Ténia, _a rowle that women were wont to weare on their heads. Also a wollen ornament like a turbant that men were wont to weare on their heades. Also a womans head-band, fillet or haire-lace. Also the knot or fastning of a fillet or haire-lace. Also a kinde of long and narrow Sea-fish. Also a kind of brow, Cornish out iutting out ouer pillers. Also a long row of rockes or cliffes along the Sea-shore, or a Veine of white stones which to them that be a farre off vpon the sea appeareth long like to a coure-cheffe. Also a kind of worms that be long, broad and slender, of some called Graue-wormes, as engendering of the rotten flesh of dead bodies._
Teniẻnse, _any fish that liues by the borders or brimes of the sea._
Teniẻre, _a tiller of a Crosse-bow. Also a houldfast or place to hould fast by._
Tenimént[o], _a tenement, a free-hould. Also any hould or houlding._
Téni[o], _that hath thine haire._
Tenit[ó]re, _a houlder, a keeper._
Tenit[ó]re delli béni, _an Executer of a mans goods._
Tenitóri[o], _as_ Tẻrritóri[o].
Tenmelín[o], _a wine in Greece now out of vse._
Ten[ó]re, _a tenor, a tenure, a forme, a content, a continuall order, state or continuance of any thing without interruption neuer changing maner. Also a tenor or degree in musik. Also a subiect or argument to write or speak of._
Tensíbile, _that may be extended._
Tensi[ó]ne, _extension, out stretching._
Téns[o], _extended, out stretched._
Tentab[ó]nd[o], _attempting, assaying._
Tentáli, _a kind of fish._
Tentamént[o], _an tempting, an attempting, an assay, a proouing, a triall, a sounding._
Tentáre, _to tempt, to attempt, to try, to assay, to sound, to prooue, to offer or goe about to doe a thing. Also to handle or feele or grope for. Also to tempt one to doe some euill, to prouoake or egge one._
Tentataménte, _attemptingly, by triall or assay. Also feelingly or gropinglie._
TEN
Tentati[ó]ne, _a tempting or temptation._
Tentatíu[o], _as_ Tentamént[o].
Tentat[ó]re, _a tempter_, _an attempter._
Tentenín[o], _a tempting_, _an inticing man, woman, motion or spirit._
Tenténna pennácchi[o], _a tisty-tosty-wag-feather, one that hath more haire then wit._
Tentennáre, _as_ Nicchiáre. _Also to shake or stagger and be ready to fall. Also as_ Tintinnáre.
Tentennáta, _a yarking or sound of the stroake of a whip. Also a lash, a blow, a stripe or bang with any weapon._
Tentenn[ó]ne, _an easie-tempted gull or foole._
Tentígine, _as_ Priapísm[o].
Tentigin[ó]s[o], _troubled with_ Priapísm[o].
Tenti[o]náre, _as_ Tenz[o]náre.
Tenti[ó]ne, _as_ Tenz[ó]ne.
Tentipẻlli[ó]ne, _a medicine or instrument to make the skin plain with out wrinkles._
Tentipel[ó]ne, _as_ Tentipẻlli[ó]ne.
Tént[o], _died, stained or coloured. Also a taint in a horse._
Tent[o]náre, _to grope or fumble in the darke._
Tent[ó]ne, _gropingly in the darke._
Tent[ó]n tent[ó]ne, _as_ Tent[ó]ne.
Tent[ó]re, _a Dyer or stainer of colours._
Tent[o]ría, _the arte of dying. Also a Dye-house._
Tentóri[o], _a Field-tent or Pauillion made of sacke-cloath._
Tentúra, _a dying or stayning, a colouring._
Tenturáre, _to die, to staine, to colour._
Tenuáre, _to make or become small, leane, thin, lesse or feeble, to extenuate._
Tenuati[ó]ne, _a becomming or making small, leane or thin, an extenuation._
Tenuità, _slendernesse, leannesse, gantnesse, thinnesse, meagrenesse, smallnesse._
Ténu[o], _leane, meagre, thin, feeble, gant, small, sparing, spiny._
Tenúta, _a holding, a tenament, a possession. Also contayning or capacitie._
Tenúta, _held, kept. Looke_ Tenére.
Ténza, _as_ Tenz[ó]ne.
Tenzáre, _as_ Tenz[o]náre.
Tenz[o]náre, _to contend, to quarrell, to strive._
Tenz[ó]ne, _a contention, a quarrell, a strife._
Tenz[o]n[ó]s[o], _contentious, quarrellous._
Te[o]fanía, _as_ The[o]fanía.
Te[o]g[o]nía, _as_ The[o]g[o]nía.
Teol[o]gía, _as_ Theol[o]gía.
Teol[o]gizzáre, _as_ Theol[o]gizzáre.
Teól[o]g[o], _as_ Theól[o]g[o].
TER
Tè operánte, _thee working._
Teórica, _as_ Theórica.
Teóric[o], _as_ Theóric[o].
Tepefáre, _to heate or warme._
Tepére, _as_ Intepidíre.
Tepidaménte, _meanely warme, nor hot nor cold, faintly, nothing earnestlie._
Tepidári[o], _a whot baine, bath, stoue or whot-house, but properly the entry into the stoue, baine or first chamber of it, where they were wont to wash themselues in warme water._
Tepidézza, _naturall warmth, lew warmth, meanenesse betweene heate and cold._
Tepidíre, dísc[o], dít[o], _to make or becom lew warme, to become neither hot nor cold. Also to become faint or slow. Also to calme, to allay or asswage._
Tepidità, _as_ Tepidézza.
Tẻpid[o], _lew warme, indifferent, neither hot nor cold. Also faint or nothing earnest._
Tep[ó]re, _naturall warmth or heate._
Téppe, _tufes or clods of earth._
Tè presẻnte, _thou being present._
Terág[o], _a kind of little fish._
Teram[ó]ne, _a weed that killeth beanes in hard ground._
Terapẻstica, rimediále medicína.
Teraphín[o], _a kind of caruing or imagery worke so called._
Tẻrázza, _as_ Tẻrráccia.
Tẻrbichét[o], _a cucking-stoole._
Tẻrdẻcim[o], _the thirteenth in order._
Tẻrdúra, _a kind of meat for poore folkes like to a hasty pudding._
Terebentína, _Turpentine. Looke_ Terebínt[o].
Terebínt[o], _the tree that yeeldeth Turpentine, the Terebinth-tree._
Teredíne, _any kind of hand-worme. Also any timber-worme or Wooll-moath._
Terétr[o], _an instrument that Founders or Turners vse to make any thing round._
Tẻrfez, _a kind of hearbe or roote._
Tẻrgémin[o], _one of the three borne at one time. Also triple or threefold._
Tẻrgere, tẻrg[o], tẻrgéi, tẻrgiút[o], _to backe or shield and couer. Also to backe. Also to retire or draw backe. Also to drie, to burnish, to scoure, to polish or make smooth._
Tẻrgidut[ó]re, _a Seriant of a band that commonly followeth his troupes._
Tẻrgirín[o], _a thin paile, wall or partition of hedges, rods, reedes or bushes._
Tẻrgiuẻrsáre, _to turne backe or ones taile vnto. Also to shrinke or auoide from. Also to run away and fight still. Also to dodge, to deny and wrangle or to haft & by no meanes to come to any reasonable point._
TER
Tẻrgiuẻrsati[ó]ne, _turning backe or ones taile unto, shrinking or auoided from. Also a running away and fighting still. Also a dodging, a wrangling. Also a none suite in the law, when the Law, when the Plaintife letteth his suite fall._
Tẻrgiuẻrsat[ó]re, _one that withdraweth and shrinketh backe and will not hold to a point, a wrangler, a hefter, a dodger, one that runneth backe._
Tẻrgiuẻrsi[ó]ne, _as_ Tẻrgiuẻrsati[ó]ne.
Tẻrgiút[o], _backt, shield. Looke_ Tẻrgere.
Tẻrg[o], _the backe or shoulders of a man, any hinder part. Also a hide or skin._
Téri, _a kind of coine in Naples._
Teriáca,_ Treacle against poison. Also a kind of Vine whose wine healeth bitings of venemous Serpents._
Terígi[o], _as_ Pterígi[o].
Teríg[o]de, _as_ Pteríg[o]de.
Terigóide, _as_ Pterigóide.
Teri[ó]ne, _a kind of beast._
Tẻrlígia, _browne slacke-cloath worne in doublets._
Tẻrlín[o], _a foule called a Curlue._
Tẻrlísa, _as_ Tẻrlígia.
Tẻrme, _as_ Thẻrme. _Also a magot or gentle-worme._
Termentína, _any kind of Turpentine._
Termigíst[o], _a great boaster, quareller, killer, tamer or ruler of the Vniuerse, the child of the earth-quake and of the thunder, the brother of death, &c._
Tẻrminábile, _boundable, terminable. Also that may be ended or determined._
Tẻrminále, _of or belonging, or seruing vnto bounds, confines or limits. Also a meare-stone, a land-marke or bound to shew the limites of fields or lands. Also a kinde of Medlar or Saruice-fruite._
Tẻrminálie, _feastes instituted in the honour of the God Terminus, kept in February on the eight Calends of March, because that betweene_ Tẻrminálie _and_ Regifúgi[o] _the odde daies were put in._
Tẻrmináre, _to terminate, to limit, to bound, to confine, to assigne bounds, or appoint Marches. Also to decide, to determine or define. Also to end._
Tẻrminataménte, _determinatly, conclusiuely, definitely._
Tẻrminati[ó]ne, _a termination, a limitation, a bounding, a decision, an ending._
Tẻrmine, _the end or compasse of any thing, a tearme, a bound, a limit. Also a Meare-stone, a Land-marke, a signe declaring one mans land from another. Also an end, an ayme, a gole. Also a terme or state of being or time. Also a fit or stint of an ague._
TER
Tẻrmine di fẻbbre, _a fit or stint of an ague._
Tẻrminéu[o]le, _as_ Tẻrminábile.
Tẻrmín[o], _a God to whom Numa consecrated a Temple. Lat._
Tẻrmin[ó]s[o], _full of bounds or limits._
Tẻrmínt[o], _a hard or red swelling rising sometimes in the crowne of the head, in the priuy parts or arme pits, called of our Chirurgions a Manchet or little loafe. Also as_ Terebínt[o].
Tẻrnále, _of or consisting of three._
Tẻrnaría, _a Magistrate in Venice that hath charge of the custome of Oyles._
Tẻrnári[o], _of three, consisting of three._
Tẻrnétta, _a kind of small lace or twist of silke or gold._
Tẻrni, _a cast of two treas vpon the dice._
Tẻrníre, nísc[o], nít[o], _to tarnish or darken and mist-ouer, as burnished plate or glasse will be being breathed vpon._
Tẻrnità, _a Trinity, a number of three. Vsed also for_ Etẻrnità.
Tẻrpentína, _Turpentine._
Tẻrque, _vsed for, and three times._
Tẻrra, _the element called earth. Also our generall mother the earth. Vsed also for the whole world. Also any earth, or ground, or land. Also any land, countrie, prouince, region, or soile. Also any particular citie, towne, borough, village, or hamlet. Also any Mannor, Lordship, Farme-house, free-hold, or copie-hold._
Tẻrrabása, _a foule called a Bittour._
Tẻrrà, _of_ Tenére, _he shall hold._
Tẻrráccia, _any filthie earth or ground. Also rubble or rubbish. Also a terrace, an open walk, or gallorie, a leades, a flat roofe, floore, or seeling. Also as_ Rauẻllín[o]. _Also a little towre, hold, or keepe, where a sentinell or skout doeth sit and watch._
Tẻrraccián[o], _a townes-man, or dweller in any towne or citie, a burges of a towne._
Tẻrra cimólia, _Tuckers-earth, Fullers-weede._
Tẻrra di Sán Pá[o]l[o], _as_ Tẻrra Sámia.
Tẻrra di vassẻllái, _Potters-clay._
Tẻrrád[o], _a kind of flat boate in India._
Tẻrra fẻrma, _the firme or maine land._
Tẻrra fránca, _a Free-towne, a Common-weale, a free-state. Also a free-hold._
Tẻrrágli[o], _as_ Tẻrrapién[o].
Tẻrrágna, _any thing made of earth, mud or such thing. Also a mud-wall._
Tẻrrágn[o]. _Looke_ M[o]lín[o]. _Vsed also of Dánte for_ Tẻrrén[o].
Tẻrrágn[o]l[o], _drooping, downe looking, drouzie, dull, heauy, going as some heauy-going horses. Also earthen or leaden-witted. Also of or belonging vnto the earth, or breeding and liuing in or on the earth._
TER
Tẻrraiuól[o], _a Quoist or Stocke-doue or Ring-doue. Also as_ Tẻrrágn[o]l[o].
Tẻrra lénia, _as_ Tẻrra sigilláta.
Tẻrráma, _a worldly care or carking for worldly pelfe or earthly matters._
Tẻrráme, _any earthen pot, or made of earth._
Tẻrra muráta, _a walled towne._
Tẻrránd[o]la, _a bird called a Bunting._
Tẻrrané[o]la, _a bird called a Bunting._
Tẻrránt[o]la, _a Salamander. Also a Bunting. Also as_ Taránt[o]la.
Tẻrrapianát[o], _razed, made euen or leuell to the ground. Also filled vp with earth or mud. Also ensconced, ramparded, enflanked or entrenched with earth._
Tẻrrapién[o], _a rampard, a bull-warke, a sconce, a blocke-house, a trench or other fence and fortification, rammed in, fortified or filled vp with earth or rubble. Also the earth or rubble rampired or filled vp vnto the inside of any rampard, wall or fortification._
Tẻrra sámia, _as_ Tẻrra sigilláta.
Tẻrra sigilláta, _a kind of earth breeding in Samos, sealed with the great Turks seale, and very much esteemed among the Turkes if it be right, for it is very good against poison, but much of it is counterfeit._
Tẻrráta, _as_ Tẻrrád[o].
Tẻrrát[o], _as_ Tẻrrapién[o]. _Also earthed._
Tẻrrázza, _as_ Tẻrráccia.
Tẻrrazzán[o], _as_ Tẻrraccián[o].
Tẻrrazzáre la tẻrra, _to grub or breake vp the earth. Also to harrow land._
Tẻrrefáre, _to terrifie, to affright, to put in feare or terrour._
Tẻrrẻistà, Tẻrrẻità, _as_ Tẻrrẻstrẻità.
Tẻrremótic[o], _subiect to earthquakes or shaking of the earth._
Tẻrremót[o], _an earth-quake or shaking of the earth._
Tẻrréna cámera, _a low or ground chamber._
Tẻrréna stánza, _idem._
Tẻrréni. _Vsed for worldly men._
Tẻrrén[o], _terrestriall, earthly, made of earth. Also worldly. Also low on the ground. Also that breedeth, liueth or keepeth on land. Also earth, ground, land, soile or mound. Also a field or piece of land._
Tẻrrén[o] da suói fẻrri, per metáf[o]ra vuól díre, matẻria pr[o]p[o]rti[o]náta.
Tẻrrẻ[o], _as_ Tẻrrẻstre. _Also of the colour or nature of earth._
Tẻrrẻstre, _terrestriall, earthly, of mud, belonging vnto, breeding or liuing on earth or land, worldly._
Tẻrrẻstrẻità, _earthlinesse, the nature or quality of the earth._
TER
Terríbile, _terrible, horrible, gastly, cruell, fell, to be feared._
Terribilézza, _as_ Terribilità.
Terribilità, _terriblenesse, horriblenesse._
Tẻrricciuóla, _a little Towne, Village, or Hamlet._
Tẻrricídi[o], _a turfe, or clod of earth._
Tẻrriéri, _townes-men, townes-dwellers._
Tẻrriér[o], _the ground where on any thing sta[n]ds. Also a townes-man, or townes-dweller._
Tẻrrífer[o], _earth-bearing, or bringing._
Tẻrrificáre, _to terrifie, to affright._
Tẻrrífic[o], _terrible, frightfull._
Tẻrrigẻne[o], _ingendred, begotten, borne, or bred of earth._
Tẻrrilóqui[o], _terribly-speaking._
Tẻrris[o]nánte, _terribly-sounding._
Tẻrrít[o], _terrifide, put in feare. Also fright or astonishment._
Tẻrritóri[o], _a territorie, a circuit, a precinct or compasse of land lying within the bounds of any Citie._
Terr[ó]re, _terror, horror, fright, dread._
Tẻrr[ó]s[o], _full of earth, earthie, grottie._
Tẻrrulẻnt[o], _as_ Tẻrr[ó]s[o].
Tẻrsicóre, _as_ Thẻrsicóre.
Tẻrsità, _neatenesse, polishednes, smoothnesse._
Tẻrsitáre, _to quack as a Duck._
Tẻrs[o], _neate, polished, smooth, cleane._
Tẻrtenére, _to entertaine._
Tẻrtenimént[o], _entertainement._
Tẻrtenút[o], _entertained._
Tẻrtiána, _as_ Tẻrzána.
Tẻrtiáni, _souldiers of the third band or ranke._
Tẻrtiáre, _to third out. Also to entermit a day. Also to third the Pike, either to beare the same vpon his shoulders, or to charge the same ouer-hand. Also as_ Intẻrzáre.
Tẻrtiáre vn pẻzz[o], _to third a piece, that is, to part it in iust proportion._
Tẻrtiári[o], _a kind of course Tinne or Pewter. Also a Tierce, or Thirdendeale._
Tẻrti[o], _the third in number. Also a little regiment of souldiers._
Tertúfal[o], _a Tertuffle, that is, a Puff, a Fist, or Toade-stoole full of winde. Also any swelling, knob, or bunch of flesh._
Tertúf[o], _as_ Tertúfal[o].
Tẻrza, _the third in order. Also the houre that Priests call prime._
Tẻrzaménte, _thirdly._
Tẻrzána, _any thing that commeth by thirds, a third. Also a tertian ague. Also the mizon, or poope-saile of a Ship._
Tẻrzána d[ó]ppia, _a double tertian ague._
Tẻrzanẻlla, _a weake tertian ague._
TES
Tẻrzanẻll[o], _a kind of slight silke stuffe._
Tẻrzáre, _as_ Tẻrtiáre.
Tẻrzaría, _a payment, or taxing of the third part of any thing, a thirding._
Tẻrzaruól[o], _a Firkin, a Tierce, or Thirdendeale vessell. Also a mizen, or poope-saile._
Tẻrzeruól[o], _as_ Tẻrzaruól[o].
Tẻrzétt[o], _a terzet of rimes, when three and three verses rime together._
Tẻrzín[o], _as_ Terzétt[o].
Tẻrz[o], _as_ Tẻrti[o], _the third._
Tẻrz[o] gẻnit[o], _the third begotten._
Tẻrz[o]létt[o], _the fore-man or iack of a cast of Merlins. Also a mizen, or poope-saile._
Tẻrzól[o], _a Tassell-gentle of a Hawke._
Tẻrzúl[o], _as_ Tẻrzól[o].
Tẻrzuól[o], _as_ Tẻrzól[o].
Tẻrzulétt[o], _as_ Tẻrz[o]létt[o].
Tẻsca, _rough places that lye vntilled, or that are hard to come vnto, where the Augures practised their diuinations by the flying of birds._
Tẻschi[o], _the head or scull of any dead creature._
Tẻse, _a generall question or indefinite argument._
Tés[o], _tended, extended, attended, spread, displaied, stretched out. Looke_ Tẻndere.
Tẻsoreggiáre, _as_ Thesoreggiáre.
Tesór[o], _as_ Thesór[o], _treasure._
Tẻsqua, _as_ Tẻsca.
Tẻssándr[o], _any web, or weauing._
Tẻssarẻlla, _as_ Tẻssitríce.
Tẻssarétta, _as_ Tẻssitríce.
Tẻssár[o], _any kind of weauer._
Tẻssaruól[o], _any kind of weauer._
Tẻssẻlla, _a little piece or small toole to worke in-laid or marquetrie worke._
Tẻssẻlláre, _to make or worke marquetrie, checker, or in-laid worke._
Tẻssẻll[o], p[o]rtáua il mantẻll[o] f[o]deráto di vái[o] c[o]l tẻssẻll[o] di s[ó]pra.
Tẻssera, _any thing that euery way is square, as a Dye, or Cube, any geometrical foure square figure, a dye to play withall. Also a signe, a note, a marke, or token. Also a token of leade, of leather, or any other thing that was wont to be giu[en] to the people as a dole. Also a score or tallie whereon the number of things deliuered are marked, such as our Bakers, our Bruers, and our Checquer-men vse to score vpon. Also a watch-word, a priuie signe or token whereby spies and enemies are discerned from companions and fellowes in armes, which was either a dumb signe, or vttred with the voice, our Sentinels call it the word, or watch-word. Also a deuise of iron called tarriers to play and passe away the time withall. Also some part of a weauers loome. Also a Printers frame for his letters. Also some part of a yoke. Also the name of a toole that Farriers vse._
TES
Tẻsseracóst[o], _the time of fortie dayes before and after a mans birth, wherein the mother might not be partaker of the holie ceremonies, which time being expired, they celebrated a feast called_ Tẻsseracóst[o].
Tẻsseránd[o]l[o], _as_ Tẻssit[ó]re.
Tẻsserári[o], _a tallie, or score-keeper, of or belonging to_ tẻssèra, _but properly a Seriant or watch-master, or he that chargeth the watch, and giueth or bringeth the watch-word among souldiers._
Tẻssere, tẻss[o], tẻsséi, tẻssút[o], _to weaue. Also to make, to build, to worke or frame together. Also to complot, to contriue, to compact, to deuise. Also to endite, to write, to compose or gather together, to context._
Tẻsserín[o], _any kind of weauer, or loome-workeman. Also a kind of fine slight silke stuffe like Calimanco, or silke Mokado._
Tẻssíbile, _that may be wouen, wrought, or contriued. Looke_ Tẻssere.
Tẻssimént[o], _any kind of weauing, web, contexture, loome-worke, or working together. Also any complot, compact, or framing together. Looke_ Tẻssere.
Tẻssit[ó]re, _any kind of weauer. Looke_ Tẻssere. _Also a kind of monstrous fish._
Tẻssitríce, _a woman-weauer, or maker of any loome-worke. Also a spinner._
Tẻssitúra, _any contexture. Looke_ Tẻssimént[o] _and_ Tẻssere.
Tẻss[o], _hath beene vsed for_ Tẻst[o].
Tẻssút[o], _wouen. Looke_ Tẻssere.
Tẻsta, _any head, skonce, pate, nole, or test, also a chiefe, a spring, or a beginning. Also a testerne, a lid or couer. Also a piece of broken bone, a shard of a pot, bricke or tile. Also any fish shell. Also the naue of a wheele. Also an earthen cup or gallie-pot, also a burnt tile or brick, it hath also beene vsed for a head-attire, or head-garland._
Tẻstábile, _that by the law may testifie or be testified._
Tẻstáccia, _any filthy head, a great nole, a iolt-head, a grose pate._
Tẻstáccie, _a kind of great Peare. Also the Costard-apple._
Tẻstacciuóle, _any little heads as lams or pigs heads._
Tẻstacẻi animáli, _all manner of hard shelfishes as Oysters or Scalops._
Tẻstacẻ[o], _made of hard fish shels, of pot-shardes, of tile or bricke._
Tẻsta délla ruóta, _the naue of a wheele._
Tẻsta del lẻtt[o], _the testerne of a bed. Also the head or forepart of any cariage for Ordinance._
TES
Tẻsta di cáne, _the hearbe Dogs-head._
Tẻsta ẻrta, _a proud man, a high minde._
Tẻsta gróssa, _a iolt-head, a grosse-pate, a logar-sconce. Also a kind of bird._
Tẻstamentári[o], _of or belonging to a last will and testament. Also a Scriuener or writer of a mans last will and testament. Also a forger or falsifier of dead mens wils and testaments._
Tẻstamént[o], _a last will or testament. Also the holy testament or gospell._
Tẻsta per tẻsta, _head for head._
Tẻstardía, _headdinesse, selfe-conceit, obstinacy, testinesse, willfulnesse._
Tẻstárd[o], _headdy, testy, willfull, obstinate, stiffnecked, toyish, fond, humorous, opiniatiue, one that followes his owne head._
Tẻstáre, _to testifie, to beare witnesse or record, to attest, to tell openly. Also to testate or make ones last will and testament._
Tẻstarécci[o], _as_ Tẻstárd[o].
Tẻstarícci[o], _as_ Tẻstárd[o].
Tẻstáta, _a head piece, a head attire. Also the head piece of any worke._
Tẻstati[ó]ne, _an attestation, a bearing witnesse or record._
Tẻstát[o], _testified, borne witnesse or record, attested. Also openly proued, certaine, witnessed, approoued, confirmed, and as it were prooued by witnesse. Also made ones will and testament. Also that hath a head, a testerne or chiefe._
Tẻstat[ó]re, _a testator, a testifier, a witnesse, one that maketh a last will and testament._
Tẻstatríce, _a woman attester or witnes._
Tẻste, _euen now, a while since, whilom. Also all manner of heades. Also a testis, a giuer of witnesse, a bearer of record, a giuer of euidence, one that is priuy or witnesse to a thing. Also certaine eminent parts behind_ Salóide, _in the extreame part of the braine, which the Anatomists called so, because they are like and somewhat resemble the stones of a man._
Tẻsterícci[o], _as_ Tẻstárd[o].
Tẻstés[o], _vsed of Dante for euen now._
Tẻstéss[o], _thou thy selfe, thy selfe._
Tẻste tẻste, _euen very now._
Tẻsteu[o]lménte, _teastily, headdily, willfully. Also with bowing or nodding of the head._
Tẻsti, _a kind of false Dice. Looke_ Tẻste.
Tẻsticciuól[o], _a little head, pate or sconce._
Tẻstíc[o]la di cáne, _Rag-wort, Gander-goose._
Tẻstic[o]lát[o], _that hath_ Tẻstíc[o]li.
Tẻstíc[o]li, _the cods or stones of any liuing creature._
TES
Tẻstic[o]l[ó]s[o], _that hath great cods._
Tẻstículi, _as_ Tẻstíc[o]li.
Tẻstiẻra, _a head piece, a caske or helmet. Also a testerne or head of any thing. Also a head-stall of a bridle, a head-strain. Also a test or couer of any limbecke. Also a woman that is_ Tẻstárd[o].
Tẻstiẻre, _as_ Tẻstárd[o]. _Also a testern._
Tẻstificánza, _as_ Tẻstificati[ó]ne.
Tẻstificáre, _to testifie, to attest, to beare witnesse or record._