Queen Anna's New World of Words; or, Dictionarie of the Italian and English Tongues

Part 47

Chapter 473,381 wordsPublic domain

Éban[o], _the blacke wood Ebany or Ebene._

Ébbe, _he or she or it had._

Ebbrézza, _drunkennesse, tipsinesse._

Ébbr[o], _drunken, tipsie._

Ebd[o]madári[o], _of seuen times seauen._

ECC

Ében[o], _as_ Éban[o].

Ébi[o], _a kind of shrub or tree._

Ebraísm[o], _an Hebrewisme._

Ẻbriacáre, _to be or make drunken._

Ẻbriachézza, _drunkennesse, tipsinesse._

Ẻbriacácci[o], _a filthy drunkard._

Ẻbriác[o], _drunken, tipsie._

Ẻbriáre, _to be or make drunke._

Ẻbrietà, _drunkennesse, tipsinesse._

Ẻ´bri[o], _drunken, tipsie._

Ẻ´br[o], _drunken, tipsie._

Ẻbr[o]t[ó]n[o], _the hearbe Soothernwood._

Ébul[o], _Dwarfelder, Wall or Danewort._

Eburnẻ[o], _of Iuorie, or like Iuorie._

Ecat[ó]mb[o], _a sacrifice vsed by the Grecians of a hundred oxen or of the worth of them._

Eccecati[ó]ne, _blindnesse. Also ignorance._

Eccedẻnte, _exceeding, excelling._

Eccedẻnza, _an exceeding or surpassing._

Eccẻdere, cẻd[o], cẻssi, cẻss[o], _to exceed, to excell, to surpasse, to outgoe._

Eccedéu[o]le, _that may be exceeded._

Eccẻllẻnte, _excellent, notable._

Eccẻllẻnza, _excellencie, excellence._

Eccẻlere, cẻllo, cẻlsi, cẻls[o], _to excell, to surmount, to surpasse, to raise high._

Ẻccẻlsità, _as_ Eccẻlsitúdine.

Ẻccẻlsitúdine, _excelsitude, highnesse._

Ẻccẻls[o], _excellent, high, advanced aloft._

Ẻ´ccene? _is there any, some or of it._

Ẻ´ccene, _there is some, there is of it._

Eccẻntrici, _circles enclosing one another, yet not having one common centre._

Eccẻntricità, _the effect of any circles that enclose one another._

Eccẻssíu[o], _excessive, immoderate._

Eccẻss[o], _excesse, superfluitie, immoderatenesse. Also a surfet, a fault, an excesse._

Eccẻttábile, _that may be excepted._

Eccẻttáre, _to except, to saue out._

Eccẻtti[ó]ne, _an exception, an exempting._

Eccẻtt[o], _except, sauing, excepted._

Eccẻtt[o] chè, _except or sauing that._

Eccẻttuáre, _to except, to reserue._

Eccẻttuati[ó]ne, _an exception._

Eccheità, _a certaine proprietie or hidden vertue that makes a difference betweene Angels. It is also singularitie or indiuidualitie._

Écchi[o], _as_ Écci[o].

Ẻ´cci, _for_ Ciè, _there is, also, is to vs._

Eccidáre, _to burne, to ruine, to consume, to spoile, to destroy, to slaughter._

Eccídi[o], _burning, spoile, destruction, ruine, slaughter, hauocke._

Eccidi[ó]s[o], _full of destruction with fire and sword._

Écci[o], _vipers-hearbe or vipers buglosse, some take it for a kind of tree._

Eccitáre, _to encite, to prouoke, to eg-on._

Eccitati[ó]ne, _enciting, prouocation._

ECH

Eccitatíu[o], _that prouoketh or enciteth._

Eccitat[ó]re, _an enciter, a prouoker._

Ẻ´cc[o], _behold, loe heere, at hand, a note of demonstration, of wonder, or of feare._

Ẻ´cc[o]ci, _behold vs, heere we are._

Écc[o] chè, _loe or behold that._

Ẻ´cc[o]mi, _behold me, here I am._

Ẻ´cc[o]ne, _behold some, heere is of it._

Écc[o]tene, _loe heere is some for thee._

Eccrésia, _a Church, a Temple._

Eccresiástic[o], _Ecclesiasticall._

E chè, _and what? and that._

Echeità intr[o]d[ó]tta da' Sc[o]tísti, _as_ Eccheità.

Echenẻa, _as_ Echín[o].

Echín[o], _a fish that is said to haue the power to stay a ship, called a Suck-stone, a Sealamprey or a Stay-ship, some take it for the Sea-urchin._

Echin[o]mẻtr[o], _a great Sea-urchin._

Echin[o]phóre, _a kind of wilke or winkle._

Échi[o], _vipers-grasse._

Echi[ó]ne, _a medicine for sore eyes made of vipers-grasse._

Echíte,_ a stone named a Viper. Also a kind of strange bird._

Echiténa, _a kind of Clemátide._

Éch[o], _an echoe, that is an answering or resounding of the voice backe againe._

Ech[o]ánte, _echoyng or backe resounding._

Ech[o]áre, _to echo or resound backe._

Eclesiástic[o], _a man of the Church, a Clergie man, Ecclesiasticall._

Eclígmata, _a kind of electuarie._

Eclíptic[o], _as_ Eclíttic[o].

Eclissáre, _to eclips, to obscure, to ouercast. Also to wane or fall._

Eclíssi, _an eclips, an obscuring. Also a waning or falling._

Eclissíbile, _that may be eclipsed._

Eclíttica línẻa, _the eclipticke line, that is the circumference of the circle wherein the Sunne finisheth his yearely motion, or a line in the midle of the Zodiake wherein the Sunne keepeth euer his course, by it and therein is measured the length of heauen._

Eclíttic[o], _eclipticke, or pertaining to the eclips._

Écl[o]ga, _as_ Égl[o]ga.

Ecl[o]gári[o], _a short breuiarie gathered out of a long worke._

Ecmẻli, _as_ Emmẻli.

Ecnẻide, _a kind of fish, as_ Echín[o].

Ecnéphia, _a kind of prodigious storme comming in Sommer with furious flashings, the firmament seeming to open and burne, as hapned when the Earle of Essex parted from London to goe for Ireland._

Éc[o], _as_ Éch[o].

Ec[o]ánte, _as_ Ech[o]ánte.

Ec[o]áre, _as_ Ech[o]áre.

Ec[o]láda, _a kinde of wine that causeth abhortiuenesse in women._

EDI

Ec[o]n[o]mía, _the gouernment of a priuate house or familie, Economie._

Ec[o]nómic[o], _Economicall, pertaining to the gouernment of a priuate house._

Ecón[o]m[o], _a house-keeper, a master or steward of a house._

Ec[o]nuẻrs[o], _contrariwise, contrarie to what it was._

Eculẻ[o], _a sharpe stake wherein the offender being put, is so tormented and racked, that his bowels are almost crushed out._

Ecunẻmic[o], _vniuersall, generall, pertaining to the whole world._

Ẻd, _as_ Et, _as_ E, _and moreouer, besides. Also both, vsed before Vowels._

Edáce, _eating or greedily deuouring. Also an eater or greedy deuourer._

Edacità, _insatiable eating or deuouring vp._

É dánn[o], _it is a losse, it is pitty._

Edderẻnte, _as_ Adherẻnte.

Edderẻnza, _as_ Adherẻnza.

Édera, _the hearbe Iuie._

Edéti, _a chiefe Magistrate or President of the Councell among the Grecians._

Edíc[o]la, _a litle house, a cottage, a shroud, a shelter. Also a litle chappell._

Edificáre, _to edifie, to build, to frame._

Edificati[ó]ne, _edification, edifying._

Edificat[ó]re, _an edifier, a builder, a framer._

Edificatória árte, _the arte of building._

Edifichéu[o]le, _that may be built._

Edifíci[o], _an edifice, a building, a frame._

Edíle, _an officer in Rome whose charge was to ouersee the buildings of Temples, a Church-warden or Suruaier. Also an ouerseer of high waies._

Edilità, _the office of an_ Edíle.

Edilíti[o], _what belongs to that office._

É di mestiẻri, _it is needfull or expedient._

Editi[ó]ne, _an edition, a creating, a publishing or setting forth._

Edittáre, _to edict, to enact, to decree._

Edítt[o], _an edict, a decree, a statute._

Édra, _the hearbe Iuie._

É drítt[o], _it is right, it is iust._

Educáre, _to instruct, to nurture, to teach, to bring vp, to foster._

Educati[ó]ne, _education, nurture, bringing vp, manners, instruction._

Educát[o], _instructed, nurtured._

Educat[ó]re, _an instructer, a nurturer, a fosterer, a teacher._

Edúli[o], _food, cates, sustenance or victuals besides bread and drinke._

Ée, _vsed of Dante for_ É, _is._

Éfa, _a measure of liquid things._

É fáma, _the report is._

Ẻ´ffe, _the letter F. Also vsed for the middle of any thing._

Ẻffábile, _that may be spoken or expressed._

EFF

É fátta, _it is downe, t'is downe._

Efẻmera, _flies that liue but one day called Day-flies. Also a feauer or ague during but one day. Also a fish that is borne in the morning and dieth at night._

Effẻmer[o], _as_ Ephémer[o].

Effemináre, _to effeminate, or be womanish._

Effeminatézza, _effeminatenesse, nicenesse._

Effeminati[ó]ne, _effeminacy._

Effeminát[o], _effeminate, womanish. Also the name of a starre in heauen._

Efferità, _wilde nature, moodinesse, fiercenesse, fellness, cruelty, madnesse._

Efferát[o], _fierce, moody, fell, cruell._

Éffer[o], _cruell, moody, raging in a fury._

Effẻruere, fẻru[o], feruéi, feruút[o], _to chafe, to rage, to be furious or moody._

Effẻruescẻnza, _a suddaine rage, anger, moodinesse or fury._

Effẻstide, _or_ Effẻstite, _a stone found in Corinth that as a looking-glasse will reflect any image, being put in colde water it will presently heate it, being set before the Sunne it will presently set any matter a fire that is able to receive it._

Effẻttíbile, _that may be effected._

Effẻttiuaménte, _effectiuely, effectually._

Effẻttíu[o], _effectiue, effectuall._

Effẻtt[o], _effect or working._

Effẻttuále, _effectuall, effectiue._

Effẻttuáre, _to effect, to bring to passe._

Effẻttu[ó]s[o], _effectuall, effectiue._

Efficáce, _forcible, effectuall._

Efficácia, _efficacy, force._

Efficacissimaménte, _most effectually._

Efficcacità, _efficacy, force._

Efficiẻnte, _efficient, bringing to passe._

Efficiẻnteménte, _efficiently, forcibly._

Efficiẻnza, _efficience, or power to doe._

Effigiati[ó]ne, _an expressing of any thing with life._

Effigiáre, _to figure, to shape, to draw, to paint, or to carue ones face._

Effígie, _a figure, a shape of ones face._

Effímera, _as_ Effẻmera.

Effi[o]cáre, _to be, to grow or make hoarse._

Effluẻnte, _out-flowing or gushing._

Effluẻnza, _an out-flowing or gushing._

Effluíre, ísco, íto, _to gush or flow out._

Efflusi[ó]ne, _as_ Effluẻnza.

Effrenát[o], _vnbridled, as_ Sfrenát[o].

Effúndere, fúnd[o], fúsi, fús[o], _to scatter, to poure out, to waste riotously, to shed blood, to melt or cast as metals._

Effusi[ó]ne, _effusion or shedding of blood, scattering or wastefull spending._

Effús[o], _effused, shed, scattered, moulten._

È fórza, _of force, perforce, of necessity._

EGL

Eftimémeri, _a kind of breaking or fall of a verse._

Éfula, _a kind of gardine hearbe._

Efód, _a priestly garment, vsed anciently among the Hebrewes ceremonies._

Efór[o], _was among the Lacedemonians as a Tribune among the Romans._

Egẻnte, _needy, lacking, poore._

Egẻsta, _necessity of all things, need, pennury, beggery._

Egẻst[o], _poore, needy, beggerly._

Égia, _a kind of vine or grape._

Egiaculáre, _to cast foorth._

Egiaculati[ó]ne, _a casting foorth._

Egída, _the female Larch-tree. Also as the latine Diphthera._

Egíde, _a shield with a Medusas or Gorgons head in it mentioned in Poets._

Egilópa, _a kind of bulbous plant or Onion that growes not till a yeare after it is sowen. Also a kind of wild oates. Also the hearbe Beane-trifoly. Also a disease in the eie._

Egiópsi[o], _a kinde of very high Oke-tree._

Egipáni, _a kind of people like Satyres._

Egipán[o], _a kind of Satyre or monster._

Egípt[o], _darkenesse or tribulation._

Egiptíla, _a kind of blackish stone._

Egíth[o], _a little bird, but a heauy enemy to the Asse._

Egítt[o], _darkenesse or tribulation._

Egittiáchi gi[ó]rni, _vnluckie, fatall, blacke or dismall daies._

Eglec[ó]pula, _doue or pigeon marle._

Égli, _speaking of persons, he._

Égli,_speaking of things, it._

Égli, _both in the beginning and in the midst of a speech or sentence serueth sometimes as an Aduerbe, and that rather for a grace then necessitie, as_ Egli ẻra in quést[o] castẻll[o] una dónna uéd[o]ua, _or else_ Darátti égli il cuóre di t[o]ccárla.

Égli d[o]uéua ẻssere, _belike he or it was._

Egli è, _he, or it is._

Eglikl[o]pedía, _a world or compasse of all learning, or as some construe it, things that are neither altogether vnknowen or that become doubtfull._

Églin[o], _they, them._

Égli stéss[o], _himselfe, he himselfe._

Égli uién détt[o], _it is said, men say._

Égl[o]ga, _an Egloge, a title, a choise discourse, a communication. Also an election or choise. Also an abridgement or gathering out of Authors that one hath read._

Egl[o]gáre, _to write Eglogs._

Egl[o]gári[o], _as_ Ecl[o]gári[o].

Eg[o]cẻphál[o], _a bird called a Dogs-head._

Eg[o]céra, _a kind of Fenigreeke._

Eg[o]let[ó]ne, _an hearbe hurtfull to all cattle._

Ególi[o], _a kinde of Kite or filthy Putocke._

ELA

Eg[o]nich[ó]ne, _the hearbe Greimile._

Eg[o]phtálm[o], _a precious stone named a Goates-eye._

Egraménte, _sickely, crazedly._

É grán tẻmp[o], _it is a long time._

Egrẻdere, grẻd[o], grẻssi, grẻss[o], _to goe forth._

Egrediẻnte, _going out or forth._

Egrẻgi[o], _egregious, excellent, surpassing._

Egrẻssi[ó]ne, _a going out or forth._

Egrẻss[o], _an egresse or going forth._

Egrẻss[o], _gone forth._

Egritúdine, _sicknesse, maladie._

Égr[o], _sicke, crazed, ill at ease._

Egrotáre, _to fall sicke, to sicken._

Egrót[o], _sicke, ill at ease, crazed._

Eguagliánza, _equaling, equalitie._

Eguagliáre, _to equall, to match._

Eguagnẻla, _a common oath among the common people, as one would say, by the Gospell._

Egualáre, _to equall, to match._

Eguále, _equall, euen, matched._

Egualità, _equalitie, euennesse._

Egurgitáre, _to gorge or cast forth._

Egurgitati[ó]ne, _gorging forth._

Egúia, _a kinde of course rough brimstone._

Éh, _an interiection of sorrow, of entreating or reproouing, oh, alas, aye me, I pray you._

Ẻhi, _as_ Éh. _Also fie or fie vpon._

Ehimè, _aye me, alas, weladay._

Ei, _as_ Egli.

É huóp[o], _it is needfull._

Eidílie, _small poemes, as Eglogs._

Eiẻttáre, _to eiect or cast out._

Eiẻttícia, _a sowes wombe cast or slipt together with her pigges._

Eietti[ó]ne, _an eiection, a casting out._

Eiẻtto, _eiected, cast out._

El, _the letter_ L. _Also as_ Ei. _Also for_ Et il, _and the._

Elápe, _a kind of Serpent._

Elaph[o]b[ó]sc[o], _Oliue-phyllon or Maidens mercury, some take it for wilde-Angelica or Gratia dei._

Eláphi, _a kind of Cake or Wafer._

Elánde, _as_ Alce.

Elargíre, gísc[o], gít[o], _to inlarge._

Elargit[ó]re, _an inlarger._

Elargiti[ó]ne, _an inlargement._

Eláss[o], _past, ouerworne, ouertired._

Eláta, _a kind of Date or Date-tree._

Eláte, _a tree the wood and liquor thereof is vsed in perfumes._

Elatẻri[o], _a medicineable iuice drawne from the wilde Cucumber._

Elátia, _a kinde of Leade-ore in gold-mines._

Elatín[o], _Bucke-wheate or Binde-corne._

Elati[ó]ne, _pride, scorne, or disdaine in ones countenance._

Elatíte, _a kind of bloud-stone._

Elát[o], _scornefull in lookes, swolne with pride, disdainefull._

Ẻlbúcci[o], _a kinde of tree or wood._

Ẻlcatáin[o].

Ẻ´lce, _a Holme-tree._

Ẻ´lcia, _as_ Ẻ´lce.

Ẻlciári[o], _as_ Alzaniére.

Eleb[o]rit[ó]ne, _wine of Eleboro._

Elẻb[o]r[o], _an hearbe that purgeth melancholy or madnesse._

Elẻb[o]r[o] biánc[o], _Ling-wort or Neese-wort._

Elẻb[o]r[o] nér[o], _Beare-foote, Tetter-wort, or tetter-grasse._

Elebr[ó]th, _as_ Elembr[ó]th.

Elefánte, _an Elephant. Also a fish._

Elefantát[o], _become strong or great as an Elephant._

Elefantéssa, _a she Elephant._

Elefantía, _Saint Magnus euill, or the Leapry which proceedeth of choler melancholy and fleame. Also a disease in horses called the farcine._

Elefantína, _a kind of hearbe._

Elegánte, _elegant, cleane, neate, trim, fine, comely, gracious. Also eloquent._

Elegántia, _elegancy, neatnesse, finenesse, comelinesse, handsomnesse, eloquence._

Elẻggere, lẻgg[o], lẻssi, lẻtt[o], _to elect, to chuse, to cull._

Elegía, _an elegie or mournefull verse. Also a kind of low crooked and winding fen-reede._

Elegiác[o], _an elegiacall or mournefull verse._

Elegiáre, _to singe or make elegies in wailefull verse._

Elegíbile, _that may be chosen._

Elegídi[o], _a kind of wailefull verse._

Elẻg[o], _a writer of elegies._

Elelispác[o], _as_ Elelisphác[o].

Elelisphác[o], _the hearbe Sauge, Sage or Mugwort._

Elembr[ó]th, _a kind of salt vsed of Alchimists._

Elemẻntále, _elementall, of or belonging to the Elements._

Elemẻntáre, _as_ Elementále.

Elemẻntári[o], _consisting of beginnings or grounds of anything._

Elemẻntát[o], _composed of Elements._

Elemẻnti, _the ground of any artes or beginnings of all things. Also Elements. Also the skies or firmament._

Elemẻnt[o], _the beginning of things created, an Element as water, earth, aire and fire._

Elémi, _as_ Ele[o]méle.

Elemósina, _as_ Elimósina, _almes._

Elemosináre, _to giue almes._

Elemosinári[o], _an Almoner, a giuer of almes or of Gods water._

Elemosiniére, _as_ Elem[o]sinári[o].

Elénc[o], _an argument subtilly reproouing. Also a table or index in a booke to shew places by letters. Also a pearle like a peare._

ELE

Elén[o], _Dogs-grasse or Deadly-dwale which is vsed to poison arrow-heads._

Ele[o]méle, _an oyle or gum distilling from some Oliue-trees in Syria, vsed in Physike. Vsed also for oyle of Lillies._

Elepódi, _as_ Ellepódi.

Elephantína, _or_ Ophiúsa, _an hearbe._

Elephánti[o], _a colour vsed of Painters._

Elep[ó]nt[o], _a kind of sea-lampry._

Élera, _the hearbe Iuie._

Elesc[ó]f, _called the Bishops electuary to purge choller, fleagme and winde._

Elẻtta, _a choise, an electing, a calling._

Elẻtti[o]náre, _to appoint by election._

Elẻtti[o]nári[o], _electiony, that may be chosen._

Elẻtti[ó]ne, _election, choise._

Elẻttíssim[o], _most most elected or chosen._

Elẻttíu[o], _electiue, to be chosen._

Elẻttiuaménte, _by election, voluntarily._

Elẻtt[o], _chosen, elected, culled out._

Elẻtt[o], _an elect or chosen man._

Elẻtt[o]ría, _an electorship._

Elett[ó]re, _an Elector, a chuser._

Elẻttríde, _a tree which some say drops Amber._

Elẻttr[o], _Amber wherof beades are made. Also a mixture of gold and siluer, the fifth part being siluer._

Elẻttuári[o], _an electuary, that is, a confection of choise drugges to be taken inward._

Eleuáre, _to eleuate, to raise, to aduance, to reare, to lift vp, to heaue._

Eleuati[ó]ne, _an eleuation, a raising, an aduancing a rearing, a heauing, a lifting vp, a preferment._

Éli, _an Hebrew word, that is, My God or else My godhead._

Eliác[o], _belonging to the Sunne._

Elíce, _or_ Helíce, _a starre, called Calisto or the great beare. Also a barren scarlet oke or Holme-tree. Also he sucketh or draweth forth, or he extracteth and culleth out._

Elicét[o], _a groue of Holme-trees._

Elícere, líc[o], licéi, lít[o], _to extract, to sucke, to draw or to draine out. Also to allure or draw from._

Elíci[o], _a surname of Iupiter, that is to say allured._

Eligmát[o], _a lohoch to be lickt vp for the lungues, breast and stomacke._

Eligíbile, _that may be elected or chosen._

Elimáre, _to file, to smoothe, to polish._

Elimati[ó]ne, _a filing, a polishing._

Elimósina, _a word composed of_ Éli, _that is to say God, and_ M[o]is, _that is to say water, that is to say Almes or water of God to wash sinnes away._

Elimosináre, _to giue almes._

ELI

Elimosiniére, _an Almoner, a giuer of almes or Gods water._

Éli[o], _a kind of musike or concord._

Eli[o]crísi[o], _the hearbe Aurelia or gold-flowre._

Eliópia, _a kind of greene stone._

Elióp[o]le, _an engine of war anciently vsed to batter wals._

Elísi[o], _a place of pleasure where Poets faine the soules of good men to dwell._

Elisphác[o], _as_ Elelisphác[o]. _Also a kind of wilde lentils._

Elissáre, _to boyle or seeth meat._

Elísser[o], _elixer or the quintessence of any extraction._

Elíss[o], _sodden or boyled._

Elít[o]. _Looke_ Elícere.

Elitrópia, _as_ Helitrópia.

Elitrópi[o], _as_ Helitrópi[o].

Élla, _shee, that woman._

Élla gli m[ó]nta, _he begins to be angry or to take pepper in the nose._

Élla gli cála, _he begins to be appeased, his anger goes away._

Élle, _they, those women._

Ẻ´lle, _the letter L. Also fifty._

Elleb[o]rína, _as_ Epipáttide.

Éllen[o], _they, those women._

Ellép[o]l[o], _as_ Elióp[o]le.

Ẻ´llera, _the hearbe Iuie._

Élli, _as_ Égli, _he._

Éll[o], _he, that man. Also being added to any positiue Noune it makes it little, prety and fine; as_ Asinẻll[o], Past[o]rẻll[o], _and such._

Ẻlmettát[o], _hauing an helmet or caske on._

Ẻlmétt[o], _a little helmet or caske._

Ẻ´lm[o], _a helmet, a caske, a head piece._

Elógi[o], _a testimony or testification._

Elói, _as_ Éli.

El[o]ngáre, _to elonge, to distance._

El[o]ngati[ó]ne, _elonging, distance._

É l[ó]ng[o] tẻmp[o], _it is a long time._

El[o]quẻnte, _eloquent, well spoken._

El[o]quẻnza, _eloquence, grace in speech._

Elóqui[o], _eloquent speech, eloquence._

Elópe, _the fish Sturgeon, but rather another fish not knowne in our Seaes._

El[o]pecúr[o], _an hearbe._

Ẻ´lsa, Ẻ´lza, _a hilt of sword or dagger._

Ẻlsáre, _to hilt a sword or dagger._

Élt[o], _as_ Ért[o], _steepy._

Eltézza, _as_ Ertézza, _steepinesse._

Elucidáre. Lat.

Elucidati[ó]ne. Lat.

Elúr[o], _a fish whose eyes increase and wane as the Moone doth._

Eluuiáre, _to ouerflow, to deluge._

Eluui[ó]ne, _an ouerflow of waters aboue their bankes, a spring-tide._

Ẻlzáre, _to hilt sword or dagger._

Ẻ´lz[o], _a hilt of sword or dagger._

Emachíte, _a red blood stone._

Emancipáre, _to enfranchise, to make free, to free out of ward, to endenize._

EME

Emancipati[ó]ne, _an enfranchising or making of a bondman free._

Emaníte, _a blood-stone, hauing the vertue to stanch blood._

Emaríte, _as_ Emaníte.

Embádi, _a kinde of shoes that onely Princes were wont to weare._

Embauagliáre, _as_ Embauigliáre.

Embauigliáre, _to steale, to filch, to purloine or hooke out of a window._

Embauigli[ó]ne, _a she-thiefe, a cunning filcher, a craftie hooker, a pilfrer._

Emblẻmma, _an Emblem._

Emblíci, _a kind of Mirabolan plums._

Emb[o]lín[o], _a shrub in Asia good against poison._

Embóli[o], _the argument or first entry into a Comedie._

Emb[o]lismále ánn[o], _a yeare that hath a day added vnto it._

Emb[o]lísm[o], _the adding of a day in the yeare._

Embriacáre, _to be or make drunke._

Embriachézza, _drunkennesse, tipsinesse._

Embriác[o], _drunken, tipsie._

Embríce, _gutter-tiles. Also a house tiling._

Embriciáre, _to couer with roofe-tiles._

Embri[ó]ne, _the wombe of a woman with childe. Also the childe in it before it haue perfect shape._

Embri[o]rétt[o], _a crooke or hooke vsed in extremities to draw dead childred out of womens wombes._

Embr[o]cati[ó]ne, _a fomenting of the head with liquor falling vpon it in manner of raine._

Emẻnda, _amendment, redresse, amends._

Emẻndáre, _to amend, to redresse, to reforme._

Emẻndati[ó]ne, _amendment, redresse._

Emẻndat[ó]re, _an amender, a reformer._

Emẻndéu[o]le, _that may be amended._

Emẻrgere, mẻrg[o], mẻrsi, mẻrs[o], _to swim or come forth of the water. Also to powre forth._

Emẻrgimént[o], _as_ Emẻrsi[ó]ne.

Emẻrsi[ó]ne, _an emersion or comming out of the water._

Emẻrs[o], _swom or come forth of the water. Also powered forth._

È mestiéri, _it is requisite, it behooueth._

Emetrén, _a stone much esteemed of the Assirians, and vsed of Nigromants._

Eméttere, _to emit or send forth._

Émfasi, _emphasis or expresse signification of that which is intended._

Emfátic[o], _emphaticall, significant._

Emíde, _a Tortoise keeping in fresh water._

Emigránda, _as_ Emigránia.

Emigránia, _an ache or paine in halfe the head._

Emigráre, _to goe or wander forth._

EMP

Emigrati[ó]ne, _a going or wandring forth._

Eminẻnte, _eminent, aloft, in full view, apparent, in sight and on high._

Eminẻa, _a kind of lasting grape._

Eminẻnza, _eminencie, supremacie._

Emisphẻric[o], _halfe spheared or round._

Emisphẻr[o], _as_ Hemisphẻr[o].

Emissári[o], _to be sent out. Also a spie or one that is sent out priuily as a skout. Also a poste or messenger euer at hand. Also a promooter, a busie fellow, or pick-thanke._

Emissi[ó]ne, _an emission, an outsending._

Emissíu[o], _to be sent out._

Emissóri[o], _any sending forth._

Émmi _for_ Mi è, _is to me, to me is._

Emméli, Ecméli, _a word of arte about musicke, some take it for low silent musicke._

Émmisi scordát[o], _it is out of my minde. I haue forgotten._

Em[o]láre, _as_ Emuláre.

Em[o]lati[ó]ne, _as_ Emulati[ó]ne.

Emólia, _a proportion or vnion in Musicke._

Ém[o]l[o], _as_ Émul[o].

Em[o]lumént[o], _benefit, commoditie or profit gotten by labour and paines._

Em[o]ndati[ó]ne, _a washing away._

Em[o]róide, _a disease called the Hemorhoides. Also a kind of venemous Serpent._

Em[o]róise, _a venemous Serpent._

Empásma, _a composition of diuers sweete powders to take away filth and sweating, and cause itching._

Empegnáre, _as_ Impegnáre.

Empégn[o], _as_ Impégn[o], _a pawne._

Empẻtra, _Saxifrage, some take it for Sampeere._

Emphiséma, _a swelling of the guts._

Emphísma, _a swelling of the eye-lids._

Emphisóide, _a violent ague causing inflammation in the mouth._