Queen Anna's New World of Words; or, Dictionarie of the Italian and English Tongues
Part 95
[O]blicáre, _as_ [O]bliquáre.
[O]blíc[o], _as_ [O]blíqu[o].
Obligáre, _to oblige or bind by word or writ._
Obligati[ó]ne, _a bond, an obligation._
Obligatóri[o] c[o]ntrátt[o], _a binding contract._
Óblig[o], _a bond, an obligation._
[O]blí[o], _obliuion, forgetfulnesse._
OBS
[O]bli[ó]s[o], _obliuious, forgetfull._
[O]bliquáre, _to make crooked, bending or trauerse._
[O]blíqua sphéra, _that place of the world where the inhabitants haue the Equinoctiall cuttting their Horizon, not plumb-downe, but sideling._
[O]bliquità, _crookednesse, thwartenesse, obliquity._
[O]blíqu[o], _oblique, crooked, trauerse, thwart._
[O]blíre, blísc[o], blít[o], _to forget._
[O]blitánza, _forgetfulnesse, obliuion._
[O]blitáre, _to forget, to blot out._
[O]bliteráre, _to forget, to blot out._
[O]bliterati[ó]ne, _a blotting out._
[O]blít[o], _forgotten, blotted out._
[O]bliui[ó]ne, _obliuion, forgetfulnesse._
[O]bliui[ó]s[o], _obliuious, forgetfull._
[O]blóqui[o], _obloquy, ill report._
[O]bnossità, _guiltinesse, faultinesse._
[O]bnóss[o], _guilty, faulty, that hath deserued to be punished. Also dishonest. Also crazed or diseased._
[O]bnubiláre, _to ouer-cloud, to darken._
Ób[o]l[o], _halfe a scruple weight. Also a coine worth a penny and farthing._
[O]b[o]mbráre, _to circle or shaddow about._
[O]b[o]mbrati[ó]ne, _a shaddowing about._
Obrigáre, _to oblige, to bind._
Óbrig[o], _a bond, or obligation._
[O]bríz[o] ór[o], _a kind of the finest gold._
[O]brobriáre, _to reproch, to shame, to slander, to checke, to taunt, to reuile. Also to twit or cast in ones teeth._
[O]bróbri[o], _reproch, shame, slander. Also a checke, a taunt, a reuiling, a rebuke. Also an vpbrayding or casting in the teeth._
[O]brobri[ó]s[o], _reprochful, shameful, opprobrious, slanderous._
[O]bsẻssi[ó]ne, _a possession with._
[O]bsẻss[o], _possessed with._
[O]bsiána, _a kind of bright stone that doth often change his colour._
[O]bsíde, _a pledge, a surety, an hostage._
[O]bsídere, síd[o], sísi, sís[o], _to answer or be surety for. Also to lay siege vnto._
[O]bsidián[o], _a kind of blacke glasse. Also that is of a pure blacke colour._
[O]bsidi[ó]ne, _a siege or besiegeing._
[O]bsistẻnza, _resistance._
[O]bsístere, síst[o], sistéi, sistút[o], _to obsist, to withstand, to resist._
[O]bsistéu[o]le, _resistable._
[O]btẻstánte, _humbly, crauing and calling to God for witnesse._
[O]btẻstáre, _to obiect or call God for witnesse. Also humbly to craue or beseech._
[O]btẻstati[o]ne, _obtestation, calling to God to witnesse. Also an humble beseeching._
[O]btrattáre, _to detract, to backe-bite, to slander._
OCC
[O]btrattati[ó]ne, _detraction, slander, backbiting._
[O]btús[o], _as_ [O]ttús[o].
[O]buía, _withstanding or meeting._
[O]buiáre, _to withstand or meet in the way._
[O]bumbráre, _to circle or shadow about._
[O]bumbrati[ó]ne, _a shadowing round about._
Óca, _a goose or a gander._
Óca bagnáta, _a wet-goose, a milke-sop, a drowned Rat, a silly-gull._
[O]cagi[o]náre, _to cause, to occasion._
[O]cagi[ó]ne, _as_ [O]ccasi[ó]ne.
Óca marína, _a Sea-cob. Also a Sea-gull._
Ocarẻlla, _a Goslin or Greene-goose._
Occáre, _to harrow or breake the earth._
[O]ccasáre, _to set or goe downe into the West, as the Sunne doeth._
[O]ccasi[o]náre, _to occasion, to cause, to chance._
[O]ccasi[ó]ne, _occasion, season, opportunitie of time. Also a cause. Also a chance._
[O]ccás[o], _the West part of the world, the setting or going downe of the Sunne. Also death or decay of life._
[O]ccástr[o], _a Wilde-goose._
[O]ccat[ó]re, _a harrower or breaker of earth._
[O]ccatúra, _a harrowing or earth-breaking._
Occhiáie, _the hollow of the eies._
Occhialár[o], _a maker of spectacles._
Occhiále, _an oylet, a button hole._
Occhiáli, _spectacles. Also as_ Asprézzi.
Occhiára, _a dimnesse of sight. Also as the fish_ Oculát[o].
Occhiáre, _to eye or looke neerely vnto._
Occhiáta, _a looke, a glance, or winking with the eyes. Also as the fish_ Oculát[o].
Occhiatẻlla, _as_ Sgrámf[o].
Occhiatína, _a little looke, glancing or winking with the eies._
Occhiétti, _little eies. Also little oylet-holes. Also the Pinke-flowres._
Occhiétt[o] fáls[o], _a false wanton eie._
Ócchij, _a tree like to a figge-tree, that euery morning distilleth hony. Also eyes._
Ócchij líuidi, _blew or blubbered eies._
Ócchi[o], _an eye. Also an oylet-hole. Also wit, iudgement or vnderstanding to discerne. Also the first bud or burgeon of any tree. Looke_ N[o]n hauére. _Also the whirle-bone of any creatures knee. Also the port-hole of a ship to shoot out at. Also the hearbe Sengreen or House-leeke._
Ócchi[o] bouín[o], _a birde called an Ox-eye._
Ócchi[o] ceruiér[o], _a Linx his eies that is a quicke or pierceing sight._
OCC
Ócchi[o] d'árb[o]re, _the burgeon of a tree._
Ócchi[o] délla víte, _the burgeon of a Vine._
Ócchi[o] del tẻtt[o], _a louer of any house._
Ócchi[o] di búe, _the hearb Ox-eie, May wood or stinking Cammomill._
Ócchi[o] di Ciuétta, _an owles ore, but taken for a faire piece of gold or coystrell._
Ócchi[o] di gáll[o], _a sharp tacke or tenter-hooke._
Ócchi[o] di gátta, _a kinde of precious-stone._
Ócchi[o] e dim[ó]ra aiútan[o] il uér[o].
Occhi[o]lín[o], _any little eye or oylet-hole._
Ócchi[o] sán[o], _a sound eie, that is to say, wise, discreet, not passionate._
Ócchi[o] spárs[o] di sángue, _an eye bloud-shotten._
Occhiutíssim[o], _most sharp sighted._
Occhiút[o], _eyed, that hath or is full of eyes. Also a warie and vigilant fellow._
[O]ccidẻntále, _Westernly, of the Western parts._
[O]ccidẻnte, _the West part of the world, the Sunne-set. Also the Western-wind. Also any declining or drawing to an end. Also quick-siluer among Alchimists._
[O]ccídere del s[o]le ẻ délla lúna, _to set or goe downe in the West as the sunne doeth._
[O]ccídere, cíd[o], císi, cís[o], _to kill, to slay, to quell, to murther or wound to death._
[O]ccidit[ó]re, _a killer, a slayer, a queller._
[O]ccipúte, _the noddle, the nape of the necke or hinder part of the head, the third bone of the head ending at the labdal suture, disioyned in the foundation of the head from_ [O]ss[o] sphen[ó]id[o] _by the sixt suture ouerthwartly chanceing._
[O]ccisi[ó]ne, _slaughter, killing, slaying, murthering to death of man or beast._
[O]ccís[o], _slaine, killed, quelled, murthered._
[O]cc[o]rẻnza, _an occurrence, a chance, a hap._
[O]cc[o]rẻnze, _occurrences, accidents._
[O]cc[ó]rrere, c[ó]rr[o], c[ó]rsi, c[ó]rs[o], _to occur, to happen, to chance, to betide, to come to passe. Also to meet with or runne vnto._
[O]cc[ó]rs[o], _hapned, chanced, befalne. Also an accident, an encounter or meeting with._
[O]ccultamént[o], _an hiding, a concealing._
[O]ccultáre, _to hide, to conceale, to close._
[O]ccultati[ó]ne, _as_ [O]ccultamént[o].
[O]ccultát[o], _as_ [O]ccúlt[o].
[O]ccúlt[o], _hidden, concealed, secret, close._
OCC
[O]ccupáre, _to occupy, to vse, to possesse or be seazed of. Also to vsurpe from. Also to keepe or hinder from._
[O]ccupati[ó]ne, _occupation, vse, possession, seazure. Also an vsurping from._
[O]ccupát[o], _occupied, vsed, possessed, seazed on, busied. Also gotten or vsurped._
[O]ccupat[ó]re, _an occupier, a possessor, a vser, a seazer. Also an vsurper._
[O]ceán[o], _the Ocean, the Sea, the maine deepe that compasseth the world._
Óce, _the swiftest kind of Swallow that is._
Ocẻlli, _such as are pinke-eide or haue little eies._
O chè f[ó]sse, _oh that it were._
Ocheggiáre, _to play the Goose or Gander._
[O]chís[o], _a kind of corne that growes very quickly._
Óchra, _as_ Ócra.
Ociáre, _to be idle or be at leasure._
[O]cím[o], _Bolimong or Prouander-corne. Also Basill-royall, gardin-basill or Basil-gentle._
[O]cimóide, _as_ [O]cím[o].
Óci[o], _as_ Óti[o].
Oci[ó]s[o], _as_ Oti[ó]s[o].
Ócra, _Oker or Rudle, or Red-oker._
Ócria, _as_ Ócra.
Oculáre, _as_ Occhiáre. _Also ocular or pertaining to the eies. Also an eie-witnesse._
Oculária, _the hearbe Eye-bright._
Oculatẻlla, _as_ Oculát[o].
Oculát[o], _as_ Occhiút[o]. _Also a kind of Cramp-fish called the Seauen-eye-fish._
Oculát[o] tẻstimóni[o], _an eie witnesse._
Oculẻ[o], _full of eies, well sighted._
Oculísta, _an oculist, a professor to know or cure the sores in eies._
Ócul[o], _as_ Ócchi[o].
Ód, _either, Or, or else, but before vowels._
Óda, _a song called an Ode. Also let him heare._
[O]dduráre, _to harden, to obdurate._
[O]ddurati[ó]ne, _hardnesse, obduration._
Óde, _Odes, songs. Also he heareth._
[O]dẻ[o], _a place like a theater for plaies._
[O]déma, _a moist and waterish swelling, thin and without griefe, consisting of a cold intemperature and flegmatike matter, it is easily pressed downe with the finger and leaueth a dent or hollownesse._
[O]diachet[ó]ne, _a kinde of prickie shrub or thorne._
[O]dialcáni, _a kind of very precious stone._
Odiále, _of or belonging to hatred._
Odiáre, _to hate, to beare ill will vnto._
[O]diária, _a quotidian ague._
Odiat[ó]re, _a hater, a bearer of ill will._
Odíbile, _hatefull, to be hated, odious._
ODO
[O]din[o]li[ó]nte, _the Stay-ship or Remóra, or Echenéide, which bound to any part of a woman with child and in paine will cause her to haue presant deliuery whereof it hath his name, as one would say Ease-paine, or Loose-throwes._
Ódi[o], _hate, hatred, grudge, ill will._
Odi[o]sità, _hatefulnesse._
Odi[ó]s[o],_ odius, hatefull, full of grudge._
[O]díre, ód[o], vdíj, [o]dít[o], _to heare, to harken._
[O]dít[o], _heard, listned, harkned. Also the sense of hearing._
[O]d[o]mánte, _a kind of Soothsaier._
[O]d[o]mantía, _a kind of soothsaying._
[O]d[o]ntíde, _a kind of weed amongst haie._
[O]d[o]ntóide, _a round and long processe, in fashion like a tooth, rising from the middle of the second turning ioynt of the necke._
[O]d[o]ramént[o], _a smelling, a senting._
[O]d[o]ráre, _to odoure, to sent, to sauor, to smell, to perfume. Also to perceiue or smell out a matter, to doubt or suspect a thing._
[O]d[o]rária, _the best kind of mirrhe vsed as perfume in temples._
[O]d[o]rati[ó]ne, _sauouring, smelling._
[O]d[o]rát[o], _odored, smelt, sented, sauoured. Also the sense of smelling._
[O]d[ó]re, _an odour, a sent, a smell, a sauour. Also a doubt, a suspect or inkling of a thing._
[O]d[o]rífer[o], _odoriferous or smelling._
[O]d[o]r[ó]s[o], _odoriferous, sauory, smelling._
[O]ec[o]nomía, _the guiding, or ordering of matters pertaining to household._
[O]ec[o]nómic[o], _Economical, belonging to order or gouernment of a house._
[O]ec[o]nóm[o], _a house-keeper or master of a house, one that hath the gouernance of a house._
[O]enánth[o], _a birde that is neuer seene when the Dogge-star shineth._
[O]esíp[o], _as_ [O]síp[o].
Óffa, _a Lump-fish. Also any lump or gobbet of meate or paste. Also a kinde of pye or bag-pudding._
Offẻllár[o], _a Waferer or Wafer-maker._
Offẻlle, _Wafers or thin Sugar cakes._
[O]ffẻndere, fénd[o], fési, fés[o], _to offend, to trespasse, to wrong, to displease._
[O]ffendéu[o]le, _offensiue, offensible._
[O]ffendit[ó]re, _an offender, a trespasser._
[O]ffendút[o], _offended, trespassed._
[O]ffensác[o]l[o], _a cause of offence._
[O]ffensíbile, _offensiue, offensible._
[O]ffensi[ó]ne, _as_ [O]ffésa.
[O]ffensíu[o], _offensiue, that doeth offend._
[O]ffens[ó]re, _an offender, a trespasser._
[O]fferẻnte, _Offering. Also an offerer._
[O]fferẻnza, _any offering._
[O]fferére, _as_ [O]fferíre.
[O]fferíre, fer[o], fẻrsi, fẻrt[o], _to offer, to proffer._
OFF
[O]ffẻrta, _an offer, an offring, a proffer._
[O]ffẻrta da spándere, _a drinking-offering._
[O]ffẻrta di panática, _a meate offering._
[O]ffẻrt[o], _offered, profered._
[O]ffẻrtóri[o], _an offertory or offering place._
[O]ffésa, _an offence, a crime, a trespasse._
[O]ffés[o], _offended, trespassed, wronged._
[O]ffiási, _a sore like a tetter in childrens heads causing the haire to fall of._
[O]fficiále, _an officer. Also officiall._
[O]fficiáre, _to execute an office. Also to giue an office or make an officer. Also to say seruice in a Church._
[O]fficiári[o], _an officer. Also an officiall._
[O]fficiáta Chiésa, _a Church officed or serued._
[O]fficiát[o], _officed, serued with due office._
[O]fficína, _any shop or worke house._
[O]ffíci[o], _an office, a place of office, a duty, a charge. Also a duty in honesty or behauiour in reason. Also the due seruice in a Church._
[O]ffici[o]saménte, _officiously, dutifully._
[O]ffici[o]sità, _officiousnesse, seruiceablenesse._
[O]ffici[ó]s[o], _officious, dutifull, seruiceable._
[O]fficiuól[o], _a little seruice booke._
[O]ffiláre, _to refine, to purifie, to polish._
[O]ffíta, _the serpentine marble._
[O]ffránda, _as_ [O]ffrénda.
[O]ffrénda, _an offring._
[O]ffríre, óffr[o], [o]ffríj, [o]ffẻrt[o], _to offer, to proffer._
[O]ffuscamént[o], _a dimming, an obscuring._
[O]ffuscáre, _to dimme, to darken, to obscure._
[O]ffuscati[ó]ne, _as_ [O]ffuscamént[o].
[O]ffúsc[o], _darke, obscure, dimme._
[O]ftalmía, _an inflammation of the vtmost skinne of the eyes through sharp humors._
[O]ggẻttáre, _to obiect, or cast against one, to lay before ones eyes and sences._
[O]ggẻtti[ó]ne, _an obiection. Also a laying to ones charge, or reproching vnto._
[O]ggẻtt[o], _any obiect, whose qualitie moueth the sences to their naturall working, a thing before a mans eyes and that may be seene._
Óggi, _to day, this present day._
Óggidì, _now adaies, in these times._
Oggimái, _this day and euer._
Oghétt[o], _a march that Trumpeters and Drummers sound, called, to the watch, to the round or sentinell._
Ogliára, _an oyle-glasse, or pot._
Ogliáre, _to oyle, or dresse with oyle._
Ogliár[o], _an oyle-maker, or seller. Also an oyle-pot, or glasse._
OGN
Ogliaruól[o], _as_ Ogliár[o].
Ógli[o], _any kind of oyle. Also cockle or darnell among corne._
Ógli[o] di ben gioíre, _oyle of gladnesse. Vsed also for a sound iumbling of a wench._
Ógli[o] di rauazz[ó]ne, _Rape-oyle._
Ógli[o] di vézz[o], _Rozin, or Turpentine._
Ógli[o] d'[o]líue, _oyle of Oliues._
Ógli[o] rosát[o], _oyle of Roses._
Ógli[o] sánt[o], _as_ Óli[o] sánt[o].
Ogli[ó]s[o], _oylie, fattie, glibbie, full of oyle._
[O]gnẻlla, _a Purple-fish._
Ógni, _each, euerie, euery-one, all._
Ógni áltr[o], _each, or euerie other._
Ógni cósa, _euerie thing, what thing soeuer._
Ógni cósa pién[o], _that is altogether._
Ógni dì, _euerie day, each day._
Ógni d[ó]ue, _euerie-where, in euerie-place._
Ógni h[ó]ra, _each houre, at all houres._
Ógni-huóm[o], _euerie man._
Ogn'Iddí[o], _a title or epithete giuen to God, all-God, all and euerie God._
Ognil[o]quẻnte, _each, or all-speaking._
Ognil[o]quẻnza, _speaking of all things._
Ógni mód[o], _howsoeuer, euerie way._
Ognindì, _euerie day, dayly._
Ógni qual gi[ó]rn[o], _what day soeuer._
Ógni qual' h[ó]ra, _what day soeuer, at what houre soeuer, at euerie what-soeuer houre._
Ógni qual nótte, _what night soeuer._
Ógni quál vólta, _at what time soeuer._
Ógni qualúnque cósa, _any thing soeuer._
Ógni quánd[o], _at euerie time when, whensoeuer._
Ógni quánt[o], _euerie much, neuer so little._
Ógni sánti, _all-Saints day, all-hallowes._
Ógni tánt[o], _euerie little, neuer so little._
Ogniún[o], _each one, euerie one._
Ógniuólta, _euerie time, at all times._
Ógniuólta chè, _euerie time that._
Ogn'[ó]ra, _for, at all times, or houres, still._
Oh, _alas, oh, aye me. Also what hoe._
Oh chè, _oh that, would to God._
Oh Dí[o], _oh God, would to God._
Oh Dí[o] chè, _oh would to God that._
Ohibò, _fough, figh vpon, figh._
Ohimè, _alas, aye me, welladay, oh._
Oi, _oh, alas, woe is me, aye me._
Óia, _a fish called a Sea-breame._
Ói lass[o], _oh alas, aye me, alas._
Oimáre, _to waile, to cry alas, or aye me._
Oimè, _aye me, welladay, alas, oh._
Oiméne, _woe is me, aye me, alas, oh._
Oisè, _alas to him, alas him, or her selfe._
[O]íssa, _the cry of Mariners hoisting sailes, waying of ancker, &c. hoyesse._
OLI
[O]issáre, _to cry Oíssa, or oh-iss._
[O]l, _either the, or the, or els the._
O là, _oh there, what ho!_
[O]ladíga, _a fish called a Roach._
[O]lár[o], _a potter, a pot-maker._
O láss[o] mè, _aye me, alas._
[O]ldán[o], _the drug or gum Oldanum._
[O]leágine, _a kind of precious stone of an oylie colour. Also a kinde of yellow Grape._
[O]leándr[o], _the weede Oleander. Also a Daffadounedillie. Also a Rose-Bay-tree._
[O]leáre, _to smell, to sent, to sauour._
Oleári[o], _a place where oyle is made, kept, or sold. Also an oyle-man._
Oleástr[o], _a wilde Oliue-tree. Also a kind of Boxe-tree. Also an oyle-colour._
[O]léba, _a kind of rough-headed Owle._
[O]lére, ól[o], [o]léi, [o]lút[o], _to sent, to smell, to sauour._
[O]lezzáre, _as_ [O]lére.
[O]lfácere, _as_ [O]lére.
[O]lfáre, _as_ [O]lére.
[O]lfát[o], _the sence of smelling. Also smelt._
[O]lfatóri[o], _a strong sent or perfume vsed to awaken such as haue the lethargie._
Oliára, _an oyle-glasse, or pot._
Oliáre, _to oyle, or dresse with oyle._
Oliár[o], _as_ Ogliár[o].
Oliaruól[o], _as_ Ogliár[o].
[O]libán[o], _the gum Olibanum._
[O]lidór[o], _a kind of bricke._
[O]ligarchía, _a state or common-wealth, where a few haue all the auctoritie._
[O]lígine, _a fish so called._
Ólim, _of late, of yore, in times past._
[O]límpia, _a winde blowing aloft neere to Olimpus in Greece. Also the space of fiftie moneths or foure yeares, allowing thirtie daies to euery moneth. Also as a man would say, heauenly diuine, all-shining, or farre-splendent._
[O]limpiáde, _as_ [O]límpia.
[O]límpici giuóchi, _the Olimpike games among the Grecians, instituted by Hercules in honour of Iupiter, celebrated euery fiftieth moneth with fiue exercises, that is, the whurle-bat, that is, a kind of weapon with a plummet of leade at the end, the second, running, the third, leaping, the fourth a kind of quoite or heauie stone cast in the aire, and the fifth wrestling._
[O]límpi[o], _a flowre that turnes with the Sunne._
[O]límp[o], _is sometimes taken for seauen._
Óli[o], as Ógli[o], _any kind of oyle._
Óli[o] benedétt[o], _Holie-oyle._
Óli[o] C[o]miránti, _a kind of oyle._
Óli[o] di sáss[o], _a stone-oyle, peter-oyle._
Óli[o] gleucín[o], _a kind of oyle._
Óli[o] lín[o], _Linseed oyle._
OLO
Óli[o] petróli[o], _as_ Óli[o] di sáss[o].
Óli[o] sánt[o], _holie-oyle. Also the last vnction. Also the last gaspe._
Oli[o]sità, _oylinesse, fatnesse, glibbinesse._
Oli[ó]s[o], _oylie, fat, glibbie, oyleous._
[O]lípia, _a winde that bloweth much in Eubœa._
[O]líra, _a kind of Rice, or Amel corne._
[O]líre, ól[o], [o]líj, [o]lít[o], _as_ [O]lére.
[O]líua, _any kind of Oliue._
[O]líua perpẻtua, _gold, according to Alchimists._
[O]liuáccie, _filthie wilde Oliues._
[O]liuále, _like an Oliue, or of an Oliue-colour, swart, forswonke._
[O]liuástr[o], _a wilde Oliue tree. Also as_ [O]liuále.
[O]liuát[o], _as_ [O]liuále.
[O]liuẻlla, _the Priuet, or Prime-print bush._
[O]liuẻlle, _small or little Oliues._
[O]liuét[o], _an Oliuet, or groue of Oliue trees._
[O]liuétte, _little Oliues._
[O]liuífer[o], _Oliues-bearing, or bringing._
[O]liuígn[o], _of an Oliue colour, swartie._
[O]líu[o], _any kind of Oliue tree._
[Ó]lla, _any pipkin, possenet, or pot. Also either the, or else the._
[O]llái[o], _a potter, or pot-maker._
[O]llaría, _pot-brasse, or pan-mettle._
[O]llár[o], _a potter, or pot-maker._
[O]ll[o]métr[o], _a kind of Mathematicall instrument to measure with._
[O]lmári[o], _an Elme-plot, a groue of Elmes._
[O]lmétt[o], _as_ [O]lmári[o].
Ólm[o], _an Elme-tree._
[O]l[o]átr[o], _the hearbe Louage._
[O]l[o]cáust[o], _burned Sacrifice._
[O]l[o]c[o]níte, _the hearbe Moli._
[O]l[o]crísi[o], _the hearbe Sempervium._
[O]l[o]fánzij, _certaine ancient well practised, and trained souldiers among the Turks._
Ol[o]lig[ó]ni, _the male-Frogs._
[O]l[o]ráre, _to smell, to sauour, to sent._
[O]l[ó]re, _any smell, sauour, or sent._
[O]l[o]schén[o], _a kind of Bull-rush._
[O]l[o]tíri, _a kind of stinking shell-fish._
[Ó]ltra, _beyond, further, forwards. Also besides or moreouer. Also sauing, or except._
[O]ltraciò, _beyond that, moreouer._
[O]ltrac[o]tánza, _ouerweening, presumption._
[O]ltrac[o]tát[o], _ouer-weening, presumptuous, sawcie._
[O]ltra diciò, _besides that, furthermore._
[O]ltrafín[o], _superfine, finest of all._
[O]ltraggiáre, _to outrage, to misuse, to wrong._
[O]ltraggiat[ó]re, _an outrager, a misuser._
[O]ltrággi[o], _outrage, wrong, misusing._
[O]ltraggi[ó]s[o], _outragious, iniurious._
OLT
[O]ltrall'usát[o], _beyond custome._
[O]ltramarauigli[ó]s[o], _most maruellous._
[O]ltramarináre, _to passe beyond the Seas._
[O]ltramarín[o], _of beyond the Seas._
[O]ltramíni, _a kind of fish._
[O]ltramirábile, _most wonderfull._
[O]ltra misúra, _beyond measure._
[O]ltramód[o], _beyond meanes._
[O]ltram[o]ndanità, _beyond worldlinesse._
[O]ltram[o]ndán[o], _superworldly._
[O]ltram[o]ntáni, _that dwell beyond mountaines._
[Ó]ltra naturále, _supernaturall, beyond nature._
[O]ltrandáre, _to goe beyond, to outgoe._
[O]ltraníni, _a kind of fishes._
[O]ltránza, _might and maine._
[O]ltrapassáre, _to goe or passe beyond._
[O]ltra ragi[ó]ne, _beyond reason._
[O]ltráre, _to goe through, or beyond, or ouer._
[O]ltrárn[o], _beyond the riuer Arnus._
[O]ltra sapére, _to know beyond._
[O]ltrauedére, _to see beyond._
[O]ltra vía, _beyond and away._
[Ó]ltre, _as_ [Ó]ltra. _Also much or very._
[O]ltre a diciò, _moreouer, or besides that._
[O]ltre máre, _beyond the Sea._
[O]ltre m[ó]nte, _beyond the mountaines._
[O]ltrepassáre, _to out-goe, or passe beyond._
[O]lusátr[o], _the hearbe Alisanders. Also Garden-mint, or sweete senting._
[O]mái, _now at last, now at length._
[O]mási, _all manner of tripes, guts, or chitterlins._
[O]más[o], _the thicke and fattie part of the bellie or paunch. Also a full gut._
[O]mátici, _a kind of Figs._
[O]mbè, _well, goe too, t'is well, how now?_
[O]mbilicáli artẻrie, _two arteries marching from the nauill thorough Peritoneo vnto the sides of the bladder, they are the first arteries that are begotten in infants._
[O]mbilicári[o], _of or pertaining to the nauill or middle of any thing, but properly a little knife or lancet, wherewith Midwiues vse to cut away the nauill-strings of infants new-borne._
[O]mbilicát[o], _that hath a nauill, or is fashioned as a nauill. Looke_ [O]mbilíc[o].
[O]mbilíc[o], _the nauill of any creature. Also the midle or centre of any thing. Also any great or round bosse or bullion, such as are set on the out-side of bookes, or bucklers. Also a kind of fish called an Halibut, some say a writhen shell-fish like a Cockle wrinkled like a nauill. Also a little round and smooth stone fashioned like a nauill. Also a little circle made like a nauill in the grounds to discerne the coasts of the winds, in hilles it is taken for that which standeth out and swelleth aboue the rest. Also the crowne, top, or head of the apple iust against the stalke._
OMB
[O]mbilíc[o] dell'anẻll[o], _the beazill, colet, head, or broad part of a ring, wherein the stone or signe is set._
[O]mbilíc[o] dell'vuóu[o], _the streine or kenning of the egge._
[O]mbilíc[o] del s[ó]le, _the little circle, in the middle whereof the gnomon of a dyall is fastned._
[O]mbilíc[o] di Vénere, _the hearbe Venus nauell, Hipwort, Peniewort, or Penie-grasse._
[Ó]mbra, _any shade or shadow. Also a ghost, a larue, or spirit and vision of any person. Also any least cause or inklin of suspicion. Also a pretence, a colour, or excuse. Also the first draught in painting or drawing before it be finished. Vsed also for darkenesse._
[O]mbrác[o]l[o], _any thing to keepe off the Sunne, any place to stand in the shadow, any shadowing thing._
[O]mbragi[ó]ne, _a shading, or shadowing._
[O]mbramént[o], _a shadowing._
[O]mbráre, _to shadow, to shade. Also to startle for feare as some horses doe._
[O]mbrataménte, _shadowingly._
[O]mbrátic[o], _starting, suspicious._
[O]mbrátile, _shadie, or liuing in shades._