1. 31; Promptorium 404; Toulmin Smith Engl. gilds 382. plente 83 1. 2; Morris and Skeat Specimens II n. 19 443 'vitaille gret plentee'; Stratmann. plentith 72 1. 3. plentuously 72 1. 9. plesyng n. s. 83 1. 8. pomaunder 133 1. 1; Ellis Orig. Letters ser. 3 I 221 from Cotton MS. Titus B 1 f. 171 memorandum of instructions for the duke of Buckingham's chancellor 26 Nov. 12 H. VIII 'Item that ye cause a powmander of gold to be made with the kynge and the quenes badgeys for a new yers gyfte for the quene, and a chene of gold to hange the same powmander at her gyrdyl, so that the powmander and the chene wyth the facconne and all be of the value of x''; Peacock Church furniture 207 in an inventory of the goods of St Mary's guild at Boston A. D. 1534 'Item a pomaunder enclosyd with nedillworke and a strynge to hynge by'; Grosart ind. to Herbert; Dyce ind. to Skelton; Phillips World of Words; Madden Privy purse...of Princess Mary 257-8; Wood-Bliss 4.0.1 134; M.A.E. Wood Letters of royal...ladies II 159; Richardson. pomell 133 1. 24, 134 1. 7; W. A. Wright Bible-Wordbook; Jamieson suppl. s. v. pome; Grosart ind. to Sidney; Stratmann. pondering 122 1. 13 etc., 130-5 passim; pounderth 135 1. 6. ponsid 122 1. 25; pownced 130 1. 20, 131 1. 32, 257 I. 38; Campbell Materials for hist. of H. VII I 282 'item for ii. pounces of the kingis armes for to marke the kingis vessell with'; ibid. 'a goblet of gold pounc.'; Richardson s.v. pounce; Jamieson s.v. pounse. portculious 122 1. 26, 130 l. 21, 40, 131 1. 2, 17, 20, 29, 32, 34, 132-135 saepe. portuous 131 1. 30; Foxe-Cattley III 381; Jer. Taylor, ed. Eden, VI 218, 259 writes portuis; Peacock Church Furniture 38, 49, 52, 61, 62, 70, 71, 73, 83, 90, 140, 168, 182, 199 portes, portis, portas; Todd and Richardson s.v. portass; Jamieson (also suppl.) 145 S. v. porteous; Phillips World of Words s.v. portuas; gloss. to Foxe-Cattley s. v. porthose; Ascham Scholemaster (1863) 164, 253 'portesse'; ind. Parker Soc. S.V. portasse; ind. Cardwell Docum. Ann. s.v. portases; Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. 2 I coll. n. 47 P. 192. postcomyns 94 1. 8, 107 1. 21. pottell 238 1. 40; Stratmann and Roquefort s. v. potel. poynte, to the p.of owtlawry 81 1. 30. praised appraised 209 l. 24, 211 l. 22, 25, 27, 28, 29; praisett 131 1. 40; prasede 199 1. 30; praysed 182 l. 14, 16, 23; North Plutarke (1595) 380 f, 381 pr. Cato, to fetch it about indirectly, did praise every citizens goodes, and rated their apparrell, their coches, their litters, their wiues chaines and iewels, and all other moueables and household stuffe, that had cost aboue a thousand fiue hundred Drachmes a peece, at tenne times as much as they were worth moreouer he ordained for euery thousand Asses that those trifling things were praised at, the owners thereof should pay three thousand Asses to the common treasury'; Richardson s. v. praise (no. 2); Promptorium 414 a. prayours = prayers 132 1. 6. praysers appraisers 184 1. 2; North in Richardson s. v. praise (no. 2); Promptorium 'PRYSARE, or setter at price, yn a merket, or other placys'. = presentes, these 135 1. 32. presse n. s. praise 82 I. 27. prest loan 200 1. 17, 236 1. 9; Campbell Materials ... hist. H. VII 1 97, 178, 207; North Plutarke (1595) 638 'it chanced the king was without money: whereupon he sent to all his friends to take vp money in prest, and among others, vnto Eumenes, of whom he requested three hundred talents. Eumenes lent him but a hundred'; Richardson; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 14 615 and n.; Skelton Colyn Cloute 350-4 'but howe the commons grones | and the people mones | for prestes and for lones lent and neuer payd, but from day to day delayde'; cf. the n. II 284; Northumb. Househ. Book 399.. prested 225 1. 33. prestez priests 189 1. 1. princez=princess 186 l. 7, 205 1. 2, 210 l. 6, 212 1. 8, 15 etc. procession 130 1. 7, 10; Maskell Monum. Rit. I cviii-cxiii; in Peacock's Church Furniture the 'processioner' (also 'pressioner') constantly occurs; ind. Parker Soc.; ind. Cardwell Docum. Ann.; Brand-Ellis Pop. Ant., ed. Bohn, I 197-209. proferryd 70 1. 6. prymar 132 1. 7; Maskell Monum. Rit. II 43, in which vol. an early Primer is printed; ind. Parker Soc. s.v. primer; Testam. Vet. 588 will of Elizabeth lady Scrope proved 9 Dec. 1521 'to my lady Lucy, my sister, a primer and a psalter, which I had of the gift of king Henry the seventh's mother. psalters 75 1. 27; ind. Parker Soc. 522 ad fin.; Cardwell Docum. Ann. 1 403; Jer. Taylor, ed. Eden, VI 253-4: pultrie 189 1. 26; Gascoigne The Steel Glass 791 'Pultery'; for the form cf. Coles 'pultrie o[ld word] for poultry'; Sir T. Elyot in Richardson s. v. poult; Skelton Magnyfycence 1150 but I haue thy pultre, and thou hast my catell'; Toulmin Smith Engl. Gilds 353; Chaucer Prol. 598; Sir T. Elyot The Governour 1 18. purfled 21 1. 19, 22 1. 2; Stratmann 389 b; Phillips World of Words; Todd; Richardson; Chaucer Prol. 193. purposlie 137 1. 20. puyssaunt 45 1. 9; Fairfax Tasso I 8; Richardson s. v. puissant. pyketour picture 198 1. 24. pynacles 122 1. 21. pyte 113 1. 1; Stratmann s.v. pitê; Richardson s. v. pity. pyteous 114 1. 9, 25. pyththy=pithy 111 1. 45 a. quailede v. a. 1371. 13; Richardson. quares 180 1. 30; Jamieson s. v. quair; Roquefort 'QUAIER: cahier'; Skelton Against the Scottes 39-41 as it is enrolde, | wrytten and tolde within this quayre'; Dyce ind. s. v. quair cites three other exx.; Richardson s. v. quire (no. 1). quarter gen. 56 n. 6. = 6 quesshions cushions 133 1. 38; quysshions 1. 37, 134 1. 20; Peacock Church Furniture 71 'qui shion'; 53 quishwine' quishwine'; 166 'quussin'; 103 qwissinge'. quietouse 82 1. 30; Bale in Richardson s. v. quiet. reame=realm 7 l. 29, 30, 36, 118 1. 6 a, 13 a; Chaucer Nonne Prestes · Tale 316 'the actes of sondry remes'; Piers the Plowman pass. III 148 wo is the reame!'; Roquefort 'REALME, réaulme, réaume: royaume'; Skelton Caudatos Anglos etc. 42-4 'Dundas, sir knaue, why dost thou depraue | this royall reame?'; cf. ind. s. vv. reame, reme; Richardson s.v. realm; Stratmann s. v. rialme; Sir P. Sidney Ps. xix 7 'There be no rea'ms hidd from his beames'; Marlowe Jew of Malta IV 4 Give me a ream of pa per, we'll have a kingdom of gold for't'; Lord Brooke (Grosart ind.) twice makes it rime with beam, once with glean. reason=legend, motto 130 1. 12, 131 1. 37. recompencon 96 1. 11. recorde, bere 113 1. 20; Wright Bible-Wordbook. recoverer 129 1. 22; Gower in Richardson s. v. recover; Morris and Skeat Specimens II n. 13 394 'recouerer of the creator.' recreate 57 1. 2. redoubted 45 1. 10; Skelton Upon the dethe of the erle of Northumberland 43. reduce=translate 45 1. 17, 36. regalie 71. 31; Wycliffe Wisd. vi 22; Richardson s. v. regal. relevium 162 1. 34. religion 153 1. 29; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 14 172, 174; Trench Select Glossary. relygyous 114 1. 30; Cranmer in Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. 3 III coll. n. 65 p. 158 pr. I cannot deny but that the beginning of prebendaries was no less purposed for the maintenance of good learning and good conversation of living, than religious men were.' remember me with my glovys 48 1. 29; Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. 2 I n. 52 p. 206 'now is the time, if it please you, to remember the poor men's chest with your charitable alms.' rere-soupers 76 1. 18; Nares s. v. rere-banquet; Halliwell; Promptorium 430; Elyot's Dict. 1548 S. v. comessatio. restfulnes 81 1. 17; restfulnesse 82 1. 29; Richardson s. v. rest (no. 2); cf. restful Wycliffe Wisd. xviii 4; Andrewes Serm. (1661) 269. resydency 81 1. 38; Todd; Rích. ardson. reteyned with 67 l. 4, 23. rethoryke 46 14; Chaucer The Nonne Prestes Tale 386 'rethor'; Sir T. More Engl. Works 865 col. 'rethorique'. revested 239 1. 8; Foxe-Cattley II 153; Richardson; cf. revestry Mountagu Diatr. ag. Selden 4, II, 448; revestures ibid. 554. revoikede 137 1. 15. rewled 67 1. 18. rightez 157 1. 23. ripselner 162 1. 17; cf. averselner; Wycliffe (gloss. to Bible) has rip harvest; perhaps selner should be seluer (silver); Jacob Law Dict. 'Rippers are reapers or cutters down of corn; and rip-towel was a gratuity or reward given to customary tenants when they had reaped the lord's corn.' = rome place, office 70 l. 7; rowme 69 1. 25; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 14468, 541; Skelton Magnyfycence 514, 672; Richardson s. v. room. romth 132 1. 30; Todd s. vv. roomth, roomthy; Richardson s. v. room; N. Fairfax Bulk and Selvage of the World 54, 60 'roomth'; ibid. 58, 59, 61, 64, 66 roomthiness'; ibid. 54, 82 roomthy'. roundely 230 1.4; Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. 2 1 coll. n. 39 p. 176 f.; Fullwood Roma Ruit, ed. Hardwick 67; Todd; Richardson s.v. round. rubryshe of the ordynall 5 1. 18. ryall=royally 71 1. 31; Jamieson s. v. riall; Skelton (Dyce ind.) has 'ryall', 'ryally', 'ryalte'; Douglas Enead. XII prol. 18. rychesse 1. 44 b; gloss. to Wyc liffe Bible and Stratmann s. v. richesse; Tho. Cooper dedic. of his Thesaurus (1552) to E. VI ad fin.; Richardson s. v. rich; Todd s. v. riches; Wright Bible- Wordbook. sacring bell 131 1. 35; ind. Parker Soc.; ind. Cardwell Docum. Ann.; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 14 294; Todd s. v. sacring; Nares s. v. sacre; Promptorium 440; Peacock Church Furniture 34, 36, 38, 50, 51, 72, 91, 92, 95 bis ('one sacring bell wch Thomas Carter had and he haith made a horse bell therof to hange at a horses eare'), 96, 98 (a litle bell called a sacre bell'), 100, IOI, 105, 106, 109, 112 bis, 113, 114, 118, 122, 123, 127, 130, 137 bis, 138 bis, 140, 144, 146 bis, 149, 150, 153 bis, 156, 157 ('one sacringe bell wch honge at a may pole toppe '), 158, 163, 165 bis, 171, 246; Rock Church of our Fathers III (2) 157. sadeller 187 1. 22; Stratmann 411; Richardson s. v. saddle. saler 237 1. 15; salt 133 1. 10, 19, 6 1351. 19; Promptorium SALER, salinum CATH.'; Todd s. v. saltcellar; Jamieson s. v. sanape; Peacock Church Furniture 192, 211; Testam. Vet. 229 'saler'; Skelton Elynour Rummyng 247 some a salt, and some a spone.' salle soul 911. 32; Jamieson s. v. saul; Stratmann 416 b. sarsnet 179 1. 18. save 48 1. 30; Stratmann s. v. sauf. say 134 1. 19; saye 179 1. 8; gloss. Wycliffe Bible s. v. sai; FoxeCattley v 61; Richardson. scalacely (or scala celi) messys 106 1. 35 a, 32 b, 251 1. 38; Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. IIII coll. add. I p. 314 'it is much necessary that such abuses be clearly put away, which under the name of purgatory hath been advanced, as to make men believe that ...masses said at Scala Caeli or otherwhere, in any place or before any image might likeIwise deliver them from all their pain and send them straight to heaven'; will of Sir Henry Marney (1524) one of lady Margaret's exors. Test. Vet. 609 'I will that my executors, immediately after my death, cause a trentall of masses to be said for my soul... at Scala Caeli in Westminster.' schall 129 1. 23, 134 1. 37, 153 1. 39, 154 1. 22; schalbe 1. 25; shalbe 154 1. 37, 155 l. 4, 33; Roy, ed. Arber 95 'shalbe'; Stratmann 420-I. sche 133 l. 12, 134 l. 39; Monk of Evesham, ed. Arber 69 bis and often; Wycliff Lu. viii 47 etc.; Stratmann 425 a. schetes 134 1. 17, 18, 27; shetes 133 1. 1--3; Wycliffe Acts xi 5. scochyns 189 1. 22, 200 l. 28; skochans 260 1. 2; Halliwell s. v. scochons; Machyn's Diary III, 173' skochyons'; Leland Collect. v 318; Blomefield's Norfolk III 216 'scogeons'. scons 130 l. 12; probably stons, precious stones, should be read; cf. Peacock Church Furniture 198 'xvj other owches but litill ones of perle and stone.' scopp=scoop 1311.5; Promptorium 450 S. v. scope. scotte and lotte 86 1. 29 b; Stratmann and Phillips World of Words S. V. scot. scryvener 208 1.7; Promptorium 450. seche 67 1. 24; Chaucer Prol. 784 oure counseil was not longe for to seche'; gloss. to Morris and Skeat Specimens II; Stratmann s. v. sêchen; Richardson s. v. seek. secrete servauntes III 1. 30 a. secrets 94 1. 8. secta curiae 161 1. 39, 162 l. 34. sekenez 191 1. 22; Richardson s. v. sick; Monk of Evesham, ed. Arber 19 etc. selden (cf. Germ. selten) 93 1. 2; Stratmann 435; gloss. to Wycliffe ; Richardson s. v. seldom. semys seams 183 1. 13. sensours = censers 131 1. 8, 9; Jamie son s. v. sens; gloss. to Wycliffe Bible s. v. sense; Promptorium 'SENCE, or incense. incensum, thus'; Richardson s. v. cense; Douglas Enead. XII prol. 44 'sweit as sens'; Peacock Church Furniture 29 'sensors'; ibid. 31, 35, 37, 38, 41 bis, 43, 44, 46, 48, 53, 56, 58, 59 bis, 60, 64, 66, 69, 70, 114, 115, 116, 126, 127 bis, 130 bis, 135, 136, 139, 141, 142, 150, 151, 153, 155 bis, 156, 161, 162, 165, 166, 167, 168 bis, 169, 171 bis, 184, 192, 193 etc.; cf. Calfhill P. S. 343 'sensing = incensing. servauntez 198 1. 14. seurte 49 1. 2; Chaucer Knightes Tale 746; Man of Lawes Tale 243. 'suffisant seurtee'; William of Palerne 1463; Roquefort s. v. seur etc. sewer 228 1. 27; Wood-Bliss A.0. I 330; Howell epist. 1 2 12 'archsewer of the empire'; Richard son s.v. sew. seweth 67 1. 15; Richardson s. v. sue; Stratmann s.v. sewen; Morris and Skeat Specimens II gloss. sewede, sewyngly. sewte 66 1. 16. Shere Thursday 106 1. 5. shipp 131 1. 11, 12, 13; Peacock Church Furniture 48, 67, 80, 96, 127, 138, 184, 192, 193, 252; Becon P. S. III 362; Tyndal P. S. I 238; Cardwell Docum. Ann. I 151 l. 21. shold 1 1. 32a; shuld 1. 1; shulde 96 1. 12. sign manuell 135 1. 33; Phillips World of Words 'sign manual, the setting of one's hand and seal to a writing.' Sir, title of a clergyman; Hearne gloss. to Rob. Glouc.; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 1a 392, 397—8. sith 7 1. 39; Foxe-Cattley II 731; Dyce ind. Skelton; Hooker E. P. pref. 4 §4; Sanderson, ed. Jacobson III 97; Stratmann 442 b; Richardson s. v. since. skaldyng house 246 1. 13; Madden Privy Purse...of Princess Mary soketiz 238 1. 31; sukkettes 238 1. 38; Nicolas Privy Purse...of H. VIII 67 'sokat'; ib. 184 'socado'; ib. 224 'sucado'; id. Privy purse ...of Eliz. of York 43 'sukcads,' 226; Machyn Diary 237 'sukett'; Todd s. v. sucket; Richardson S. v. suck. solas 72 1. 7; Stratmann 453 b; Jamieson; Dyce ind. to Skelton. solidate 163 1. 16; Coles Solidata, as Fardingdeal'; 'Fardingdeal,. farundel of land, the fourth part of an acre.' son-in-law stepson 233 1. 25. sondre 180 1. 35; soundre 1881. 36; sundre 186 1. 9; Stratmann s. v. sunder. = = sonnys suns 130 l. 32, 37. sorow v. a. sorowed it full moche 113 1. 20; Promptorium 454 b. sortez 182 1. 6. souper 75 1. 26; Chaucer prol. 748. sowlez 200 l. I. sparver 133 1. 11, 31, 134 1. 25, 191 1. 9, 226 1. 48, 227 1. 15; sperver 179 1. 9; Testamenta Vet. 357, 379; Nares; Halliwell. spedde 91 1. 20. sprinkell 131 1.5; Peacock's Church Furniture 38, 75, 91 bis, 105, 252; Spenser in Todd. spycere 246 1. 14; Madden Privy Purse...of Princess Mary 103, 141. staff. crosse s. 130 1. 9; Peacock Church Furniture 33, 38, 61 ('a crose of laten and a shaft'), 69, 71, 93, 95, 98, 110, 111, 131, 137, 138, 144, 159, 171. stand in the specyal grace of their ladyes 45 1. 27, 32. standards 181 1. 7, 182 l. 21, 225 1. 31, presses for clothes and plate. Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 1 606 'three or foure carte loades of stuffe, and most thereof, excepte beds and kitchen stuffe, was loaded in great standards, wherein was bothe plate and rich hangings and chappell stuffe'; Halliwell; Nicolas Privy Purse... of H. VIII 43 'ij standards for to cary plate.' statyons 75 1. 24, 77 1. 7; Nicolas Privy Purse...of Eliz. of York 6, 224; Roy, ed. Arber 106; Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 114 227 bis. stead. stand in grete s. 92 1. 18; archaeol. XVIII 28; Burnet Hist. Ref. pt. 3 VI coll. n. 72 p. 314 fin.; Fullwood Roma Ruit, ed. Hardwick 120; Johnson. stolework 211 l. 25. = strayte measure 76 1. 16; Stratmann 474 b; Grosart ind. to Donne; W. A. Wright Bible-Wordbook and ind. to Bacon Essays and Advancement; J. C. Hare Fragments of two essays in Engl. Philol., Cambr. 1873, II 8. sturdie beggars 118 l. 43 b. stynt v. n. stay, abide. 'in joy ther mot it stynt' 54 1. 37; Stratmann 477 b; gloss. to Morris and Skeat Specimens II and to Skeat Specimens (1394-1579) s. vv. stint, stynte; Jamieson (also suppl.) s. v. stynt; Promptorium 475—6. subgeccion III l. 34 b. subgette 45 1. 14; Fisher on the 7 penit. Ps. f. ee v ro 'seruytude to synne that is whan ony persone is made subgecte and caste downe by the grete weight of it'; Richardson s. v. subject; Stratmann 478 b soget. suet 64 1.6; Morris and Skeat Specimens II n. 4 d 5 'notes suete of nyghtegales'; Richardson s. v. sweet. suffisant 236 1. 10; Lydgate Guy of Warwyk, ed. Zupitza 25 5 'content with lytel (Crist was his suffysaunce)'; Jamieson s. v. suffi sance; Gower in Richardson s. v. suffice; Chaucer Knightes Tale 773 'suffisaunt.' sugarplate 238 1. 38; Promptorium 484 'SUKYR PLATE. Sukura crustalis'; Palsgrave subst. f. 68 (Halliwell) Sugar-plate or comfettes, dragee, confite'; Machyn Diary 99. sult with 227 1. 2. summez 189 1. 5. surnape 39 1. 19. surplusage 209 1. 20, 210 l. 5, 211 1. 18, 214 1. I, 10, 33; Roquefort 'SURPLUSAGE: surplus, excédant'; Fuller Holy State, ed. Pickering 19; Phillips World of Words 'it it also sometimes apply'd to matter of account, and signifies a greater disbursement, than the charge of the accountant amounts to'; Johnson; Richardson. sustern 86 1. 33; Chaucer Knightes Tale 13 hire yonge suster Emelye'; ib. 161 'sistren two'; Koch 1 416; Jamieson and Stratmann s. v. suster; Bradford P. S. 1 370 'sistern'; Foxe-Cattley IV 681, VII 471, VIII 387 'sistren' or 'sisterne.' sute suit 132 1. 13, 16. = sysing 256 1. 31; Wood-Bliss A. 0. I 500 n. 'size'; on sizars and subsizars see Gent. Mag. (1787) 1146; Phillips World of Words s. vv. size n. s. and v., sizer. tapstary=tapestry 133 1. 12; tapstery 133 1. 13. tawny 133 1. 11. taxed charged 115 1. 2; Wright gloss. to Bacon Advancement; Johnson. terse n. s. 39 1. 21. that partyes 481. 31; Ormulum 1689 'that folkes.' thayme them 92 1. 14; theym 131 1. 20, 132 1. 6, 7, 133 1. 28; theyme 133 1. 37, 154 l. 16, 19, 24, 155 1. 6; Roy Read me and be not wroth, ed. Arber III 'it is to theym grett despleasure...to breake theym in peces a none...let theym with furiousnes swell'; Young makes them' rime with 'fame Love of Fame ed. 2 Sat. 1 ad fin. p. 20, sat. 6 pp. 135, 153. the. run together with a following word by crasis; thabbot 190 1. 12; thaccomplysshement 46 1. 18; thaccompte 205 l. 1, 210 1. 5; thaduousion 206 1. 12; thandes 205 n. 1, 206 l. 21, 207 1. 7; thandis 213 1. 27; thands 191 1. 23; thencreas 153 1. 24; thende 118 1. 8a; Chaucer Man of Lawes Tale 423; Caxton in Skeat Specimens (1394-1579) n. 9 191; thentent 118 1. 44 a, 129 l. 24; Sir T. Elyot The Governour I 18 'to thentent therby to exercise them-selfes'; thequytie 230 1. 6; thestablisshyng 153 1. 25; thexebycion 187 1. 16, 188 1. 17; thexecutours 205 1. 1, 210 l. 5, 212 1. 7; thexpedicion 205 32, 209 1. 2; thexpences 208 1. 11, 20; theyght 153 1. 11; thistorye 46 1. 8; thoder 118 1. 33a; thonnoure and thincrease 69 1. 29; thuse 207 1. 3, 16, 35, 208 1. 16, 210 1. 28, 211 l. 14, 213 1. 18 (but the vse 1. 25) etc.; thynstaunce 45 1. 34. then. which kept her to then, she came into her closet 75 l. 18. ther their 82 1. 5, 156 1. 14, 26, |