Entretien: m. Intertainement, maintenance, meanes, nourishment; also, complement, complementing, or intertaining of one another with courteous speeches.
Entretisseure: f. The woofe of cloth.
Entretissu: m. uë: f. Wouen, or wrought betweene, as gold plate in tinsell; interlaced.
Entretistre. To interlace, or weaue betweene.
Entretoise. A crosse quarter, or ouerthwart rafter, of timber.
Entretortillé: m. ée: f. Interlaced, much intangled, or twined.
Entretortiller. To interlace; to twine, or intangle much.
Entretouchement: m. A touching, sticking, cleauing, or hanging of things closely together; also, a continuation.
s'Entretoucher. To touch one another; to abut, neighbour, or be neere one to the other.
Entretouillé: m. ée: f. Intangled, fubbled, confounded; pestered, incombered.
Entretouiller. To mingle, intangle, confound, fubble vp things together; to pester, to incomb**er.
s'Entrouver. To find each other.
s'Entretuër. To kill one another.
Entreveché: m. ée: f. Intangled, insnarled, fettered, intricated,
Entrevecher. To intangle, insnarle, fetter, intricate.
Entreveillé. Halfe awake, or betweene sleeping and waking.
Entreveiller. To be waking now and then; or to lie betweene sleeping and waking.
Entrevenir. To come in on a sudden; to happen, or befall at vnawares; to be present among others; also, to mediate, or come betwixt. Tels Seigneurs entreviennent au traité. Such Lords are contained, or comprised, within the treatie.
Entrevenu: m. uë: f. Come, happened, befallen, in the meane while, or on a sudden.
Entrever. To vnderstand: ¶Barrag. Entreverdir. To be greenish; or to be greene among other colours.
Entreverdoyer. The same.
s'Entreverser. To ouerturne, or ouerthrow one another.
Entrevesché: m. ée: f. Pestered, intangled, insnarled, intricated.
Entrevescher. To snarle, or intangle one within another; or as Entrevecher. Entrevisé: m. ée: f. Viewed, or visited, now and then.
Entreviser. To view, or visit now and then.
Entrevisité: m. ée: f. Seene, or visited now and then.
Entrevisiter. To goe to see, or visit sometimes.
Entrevoir. Scarcely to see, to haue but a glimpse of. s'Entrevoir. To behold, or visit, one another.
Entrevomi: m. ie: f. Vomited, spued, or cast out now and then, or among other things.
Entrevomir. To cast, or vomit out among other things; to parbreake sometimes, or by fits.
Entroupelé. Trouped, or flocked together; assembled, or gathered, by troups.
Entroupeler. To troupe, heape, or flocke together; to gather in companies; to assemble.
Entrouper. as Entroupeler. Entuilé: m. ée: f. Tiled; couered with tiles.
Entuiler. To tile; to couer with tiles.
Enture: f. as Entement; A graffing.
Envahi: m. ie: f. Inuaded, assailed, assaulted, set on.
Vne volonté de fuïr les avoit premier envahie. They had from the beginning resolued to flie; or, feare had at first possest their minds, and put them into a humor of flying.
Envahie: f. An assault, an onset, an inuasion.
Envahir. To inuade, assaile, assault, or set vpon; also, to seise, apprehend, or lay hold on; (as in th' example vnder Envahi.)
Envain. A kind of Serpent; as Envent. Envaisselé: m. ée: f. Inuesselled, put into a vessell. Vn bel esprit envaisselé. A good pot wit.
Envasé: m. ée: f. Inuesselled, put into a vessell.
Envaser. To put into a vessell.
Envasquiné: m. ée: f. In a long, Spanish, or old-fashioned, Vardingale.
Enucleation. An enucleation, or vnkernelling; an explanation, full interpretation, absolute exposition, plaine manifestation of.
Envelope: f. Any thing that serues to wrap another in; a couer; a sarplier; a wrapper; a peece of wast paper for that purpose.
Envelopé: m. ée: f. Inueloped; wrapped, infoulded, inclosed, inuolued; also, pestered, intangled, perplexed, incombred.
Envelopement: m. An inueloping, wrapping, infoulding; intanglement, implication, incombrance.
Envelopément. Obscurely, intricately; combersomely, by wrapping, or inuolution. Enveloper. To wrap, infould, inuolue, implicate, inclose; also, to pester, intangle, insnare, perplexe, incomber.
Envelopoir: m. as Envelope. Enveloppe, & Envelopper; & Enveloppoir. as Envelope, Enveloper, &c. Envelouté: m. ée: f. Of Veluet, or cloathed with Veluet.
Envenimé: m. ée: f. Inuenomed; impoisoned.
Envenimer. To inuenome; also, to poison th' outside of.
Envent: m. A short blind Serpent, which is thought to sleepe all Winter; whence; Endormy comme vn envent. An extreame slug.
Envergongné: m. ée: f. Much ashamed, far out of countenance.
Envermé: m. ée: f. Filled with, or growne full of, wormes.
Envermer. To fill with, or grow full of, wormes.
Enverré: m. ée: f. Displeased with, incensed against: ¶Norm. Envers: (A Substantiue) m. Th' inside, or wrong side of a thing; l'envers du drap. Mettre à l'envers. To ouerthrow, turne vpside-down, tumble, or cast topsie turuie. Nager à l'envers. To swim on his backe. Tourner à l'envers. To turne the inside, or wrong-*side, outward. Nul endroict sans son envers: Prov. No commoditie without a discommoditie.
Envers. (A Preposition; signifies) towards, neere to, about; also, in the presence, or in respect, of; also, against.
Enversé: m. ée: f. Inuerted; turned vpside-downeward, or th' inside outward; also, turned in and out.
Enverser. To inuert; to turne vpside-downeward, or the inside outward; also, to turne in and out.