or highest part of a ring, or iewell, wherein the stone is set; also, the bosse, or rising of the stone it selfe; also, a fooles hood.
Cabot: m. The Gull-fish, Bull-head, Millers-thumbe.
Cabote: f. as Cabot; Or, (more properly) a Gurnard.
Cabre: f. A Goat. A la cabre morte. Vpon his necke.
Cabrer. To reare, or stand vpright on the hinder feet; to rise high before; as a Goat, or Kid that brouzes on a tree. Cabrer sur le devoir. To bee restie, or backward in duetie (from a iade that reares vp when he should goe forward.)
Cabril: m. A yong Kid.
Cabriole. as Capriole. Cabriolé: m. ée: f. Capered.
Cabrioter. To caper, to cut a caper.
Cabrol: m. An issue made for a fistula.
Cabrole: f. A certaine blew-backed, white-bellied, and small-mouthed fish.
Cabucé: m. ée: f. Headed, like a cabbidge.
Caburlaut: m. A Gull, Bull-head, Millers-thombe: ¶Tholosain. Cabus: m. uce; ou, usse: f. Headed, round headed; great headed; and, hence, Choux cabus. A Cabbidge. Laictuës cabuces, ou cabusses. Leaued, or headed Lettuce.
Cabusser. To cabbidge; to grow to a head; or, grow round and close together, as a Cabbidge.
Cacaber. To chucke, or iouke, as a Partridge; to counterfeit the voice of a Partridge.
Cacaffement de poule. The cackling of a hen.
Cacasangue: f. The bloudie flix.
Cache: f. as Chasse: ¶Pic. Also, a hiding hole, hidden corner; or nooke out of the way.
Caché: m. ée: f. Hidden, concealed, kept secret; in couert, in corners; lurking in some odde nooke or other; conueied away. Il est mal caché à qui le cul paroist: Prov. Hee is ill hid whose taile appeares; he worse dissembles whose worst parts appeare. Mal est caché à qui l'on voit le dos: Prov. Hee ill conceales himselfe that shewes his backe; or as the former.
Cachebugade: f. Æthiopian Hartwort, Seseli of Æthiopia; (A shrub thats alwayes greene.)
Cache-col. A veluet attire, or ornament for the necke; much worne by the women of France, in ancient time when their gownes were cut low before.
Cachectique: com. In a consumption; that pineth away, nothing he eateth doing him good.
Cachelaid: m. A maske, or muffler.
Cachelet. as Cachelaid. Cachemaille: f. A money box.
Cachement: m. A hiding, concealing, or keeping close.
Cachément. Closely, priuily, couertly, vnder-hand.
Cachemi-tula. A play wherein one must keepe a thing priuately deliuered him, and another find out the keeper among many others; which doing he is rewarded, otherwise punished.
Cache-museau. A kind of flawne; or, as Cassemuseau; also, a muffler, or maske, for the face.
Cache-nez. A maske, or muffler.
Cacher. To hide, conceale, keepe secret; conuey away; to couer, to suppresse; (also, as Chasser: ¶Pic.)
Cacher en la mer. To send into the sea; a ship to go
so low before, that at euerie push forward she is like to thrust her nose into the sea. Il iette la pierre, & cache le bras. He does mischiefe, but will not be seene, nor seeme, to haue any hand in it. Du temps qu'on se cachoit pour prester de l'argent. In time of honest simplicitie, and innocent confidence; when men were more carefull to conceale others necessities, than to secure their owne debts. On ne cache pas aiguilles en sac: Pro. Needles are not hidden, or laid vp in sacks.
Cachereau. as Chartulaire. Cachet: m. A seale, or signet. Cachet du Roy. The priuie signet; wherein is not, as in ours, any seale vsed, but onely the kings name stamped in characters of siluer, and afterwards couered with inke by one of the Secretaries; (this stampe is most commonly kept by the Constable; sometimes by a fauorite.)
Cacheté: m. ée: f. Sealed.
Cacheter. To seale, as a letter.
Cachette: f. A lurking hole, or corner; a close nooke, secret place, hiding hole; also, a denne, or couert. En cachette. Priuily, closely, secretly, couertly, hiddenly, vnder-hand, in hugger mugger.
Cacheur: m. A hider, concealer; suppresser.
Cachexie: f. An euill disposition of the bodie (gotten by long sicknesse, ill diet, or bad physicke;) which makes the patient no whit the better for any thing he eates.
Cachile. Sea-rocket.
Cachoire. as Chassoire: ¶Pic. Cachot. as Caquot; Also, a couert for Deere, or denne for a rauenous wild beast.
Cachotte: f. as Cachette; Or, the hole in a prison; sometimes also, a graue; and hence; Il a esté mis aujourd'huy en sa cachotte. Hee was buried to day.
Cachotté: m. ée: f. Layed in the hole, of a prison.
Cachry: m. Rosemarie seed (Mot Barbare.) Cacidoine. The pretious stone called, a Calcedonie.
Cacochymie: f. Euill disgestion; or, ill iuyce in the bodie.
Cacoëthe: m. A kind of most venomous, and incurable bile, or sore; or, a bile, or sore thats ill to bee cured.
Cacolique. (An irronicall allusion to Catholique; otherwise of little or no sence.)
Cacologie: f. Euill speech; railing, reproach, reuiling, detraction.
Cacophonie: f. An ill, harsh, or vnpleasing sound (in words;) a vitious vtterance, or pronounciation.
Cacque. as Caque; A cag.
Cacqueter. as Caqueter. Cacquetoire. See Caquetoire. Cad d'eau: m. Asgreat fall, or showre of raine.
Cadaliec. as Chaslit; A bedstead: ¶Langued. Cadarce pour faire capiton. The tow, or coursest part of silke, whereof sleaue is made.
Cadastre. An auncient rent-roll, Register, or Suruey, specifying what lands be Roturiers, and thereby subiect vnto the (kings) Taille. Cadavre: m. A carkasse, or dead bodie.
Cadavreux: m. euse: f. Carkasse-like; leane, skraggie, fleshlesse; also, putrified, stinking, rotten.
Cade: f. The crimzon, or prickly Cedar: ¶Langued. Cadeau: m. A great capitall, or text, letter; also, as;
Cadel: m. A castling, or starueling; one that hath need much of cockering, and pampering.