Saccamenter. Looke Sacmenter. Saccerelle: f. A docke for a horses trayne.
Saccharin: m. ine: f. Of sugar; as white or sweet as sugar.
Saccoche: f. A little sacke, bag, poke, or powch.
Saccouter à l'oreille. To round, or whisper in the eare.
Saceller. To rub, in bathing, with little bags full of Branne, &c.
Sacerdoce: m. Priesthood.
Sacerdot: m. A Priest.
Sacerdotal: m. Sacerdotall, Priestlie, belonging vnto Priests. Sel sacerdotal. An excellent powder, or compound Salt; (for which looke vnder Sel.)
Sacmenté: m. ée: f. Sacked, ransacked, whereof hauock is made; also, hacked, or hewed in peeces.
Sacmenter. To sacke, ransacke, make hauocke of; also, to hacke, or hew in peeces.
Sacotin: m. Feauerwort, Earth-gall, common Centorie, Centorie the leße.
Sacouter. Looke Saccouter. Sacquement: m. A hastie drawing, a quicke pulling out of a sword, &c; also, a prompt laying of the hand on a sword (in offer of drawing, or in a readinesse to draw;) also, a sacking, ransacking, rifling, making hauocke of.
Sacquementé. Looke Sacmenté. Sacquer. To draw hastily, to pull out speedily, or apace. Sacquer la main à l'espée. (An ordinarie, but (sayes Nicot) an improper, phrase;) to lay, or clap his hand on his sword (with a purpose to draw it.) Il luy sacqua l'espée des mains. He snatched, or violently pulled, his sword out of his hands.
Sacquerelle: f. A docke for a horses tayle.
Sacraire: m. A Sextrie, or Vestrie in a Church; also, a priuate Chappell, or Oratorie.
Sacramentaires: m. Sacramentaries; Protestants; Huguenots, or Caluinists in the doctrine of the Sacrament.
Sacre: m. The dedication of a Church, &c; the coronation of a Prince; the consecration of a Prelate.
Sacre d'Angers; &, le iour du sacre. Corpus Christi day.
Sacre: m. A Saker; the Hawke, and the Artillerie, so called; also, a rauenous, or greedie fellow, one that makes boot of all he can lay his clutches on; also, an excessiue glutton, or gully-gut; and a spendall, vnthrift, squanderer, extreame rioter (especially in respect of his bellie.
Sacre d'Egypte. A kind of Saker that feedes altogether vpon serpents, and carrion; and therefore among the auncient Egyptians the killing of him was accounted felonie.
C'est vn terrible sacre. He is a rash, headie, wilfull, or violent fellow; also, he is a monstrous vnthrift, &c; as in Sacre.
Sacré: m. ée: f. Sacred, sanctified, made holie; receiued into, inuested with, religious Orders; dedicated, consecrated, or deuoted, vnto religious vses.
Artere sacrée. The sacred Arterie; a branch of the great one, which goes vnto the marrow of the Os sacré.
Feu sacré. The holie fire; a painefull impostumation, the thinnesse of whose matter giues it a liuelie colour, and makes it almost to shine.
Huile sacrée. Oyle of Amber; so called of the excellencie thereof.
Os sacré. The sacred bone; the great bone vpon which the ridge-bone resteth. Pierre sacrée. An Altar stone. Poisson sacré. A red-finned sea-fish, called so, becauseno rauenous or hurtfull fish doth euer swim neere him. Veine sacrée. Looke Veine. Sacremens: m. Mysticall rites, or holie mysteries; and hence, the Sacraments of the Church.
Sacrer. To consecrate, hallow, dedicate; inthronize; inuest, install; also, to excommunicate, or outlaw.
Sacret: m. The taßell, or male, of a Saker.
Sacrificateur: m. A sacrifying Priest, a sacrifier.
Sacrificatoire: com. Sacrificatorie, belonging vnto sacrifice.
Sacrifice: m. A sacrifice, an offering.
Sacrifié: m. ée: f. Sacrificed, offered vp in sacrifice.
Sacrifier. To sacrifice, offer sacrifice, or offer vp in sacrifice.
Sacrilege: m. A sacrilegious person, Church robber, stealer of holie or hallowed things; also, sacriledge, or Church-robbing; any hainous, and horrible offence, or offendor.
Sacrilegement. Sacrilegiously; most hainously.
Sacristain: m. A Sexton, or Vestrie-keeper, in a Church.
Sacristie: f. A Vestrie, or Sextrie, in a Church.
Sadariege: f. The hearbe Sauorie.
Sadayer. To handle gently, or stroke softly; also, to flatter, smooth, cog, or collogue with.
Sade: com. Prettie, neat, spruce, fine, compt, minion, quaint.
Sadément. Prettily, neatly, sprucely, finely, comptly, quaintly.
Sadinet: m. ette: f. as Sade; (or a diminutiue thereof.) Faire la sadinette. To mince it, nicefie it, make it daintie, be verie squeamish, backward, or coy.
Sadrée: f. The hearbe Sauorie.
Saffran: m. Saffron; Looke Safran. Saffran bastard. Bastard Saffron, Carthamus, Mock-Saffron, Saffron Dort. Saffran sauvage. Wild Saffron; or, as Saffran bastard. Aller au saffran. To goe downe the weather, to decline or decay verie much in estate. Il en est au saffran. Jt hath made him bankrupt, his haire is thereby growne through his hat.
Saffrané: m. ée: f. Seasoned, or coloured with Saffron; also, blowne vp, fallen bankrupt, or grown deepe in debt.
Saffranier: m. A seller of Saffron; also, a bankrupt, one thats blowne vp, or oweth more then he is worth.
Saffraniere: f. A Saffron field or plot, a ground sowed with Saffron.
Saffrenier. Looke Saffranier. Saffreté: f. Wanton dallying, leacherous ieasting, lasciuious toying; also, rauening, or gourmandizing.
Saffrette: f. A wanton, leacherous, or lasciuious trull; a flirt, queane, gixie, pug, punke.
Safran: m. as Saffran; also, the lining, or backe, of the Rudder of a ship.
Safrané. Looke Saffrané. Safre: m. A heauie minerall, which melted with glasse, or some other the like substance (for alone it will not melt) resolues into a blewish water, wherewith glaßes, and earthen vessells be painted.
Safre: com. Wanton, waggish, toyish, lasciuious, leacherous, full of dalliance; also, rauenous, gluttonous, gourmandizing.
Femme safre, & yvrongnesse de son corps n'est pas maistresse: Prov. A wanton, and wine-bibbing dame, her bodie yeelds to open shame.