Garnison de main. A taking to pawne, or in mortgage; also, a seising, or distraining vpon an execution, or otherwise, for debt, for arrerages of rent &c; or (more properly) present payment of a debt; or saleable goods deliuered by the arrested debtor, for the securitie thereof. Le magistrat envoya le demandeur en garnison en la maison du defendeur. Put him in possession, or sent him to take possession, of the defendants house.
Garnissement: m. A garnishment, or garnishing; a furnishing, storing, supplying; a decking, trimming, adorning, setting forth, with; also, a taking to pawne, or in mortgage; also, the giuing of assurance, or securitie for a debt, &c.
Garniture: f. Garniture, garnishment, furniture; prouision, munition, store, necessarie implements; also, a ruffe-*band; also, any kind of ornament, or attire. Garniture de doigts. A gloue; ring; finger-stall; thimble, and such like. Garniture d'esperon. A spurre-leather. Garniture d'un pourpoint. The facing; (also) the quilt of a doublet.
Garon: m. Pickle of fish; or, the liquor wherein salt fish hath beene resolued, or long soaked; also, the little Anchoua-like fish, Garum, whereof (being heated in a dish, with oyle or butter, and thereby melted) the best kind of that liquor is made.
Garot. as Garrot. Garou. Wild, sauage, hideous, cruell.
Garoüage. Aller en garoüage. (A married man) to goe a caterwawling, or steale abroad by night a wenching.
Garoupe: f. The shrub called, Spurge Oliue, and widow wayle. ¶Provençal. Garous. (A Syncope of the words, Gardez-vous, or Garez-vous; take heed, turne aside, looke to your selues;) See Loup-garou. Garoute: f. A Carrot root.
Garrau. as Garrot. Garrer vn bateau. To hale, or pull a boat ashoare, or vnder a shed; (there to trimme her;) also, to moore, or tye her vnto a key, or vnder a lee shore. Se garrer dessous. To skowke; shadow, shrowd, or put himselfe, vnder; whence; Qui se garre dessous la fueille deux fois se mouille: Prov. Garrigues. as Guarrigues. Garrobe. The Carob-beane-cod; See Carrobe. Garrobier: m. The Plant that beares Carobs.
Garrot: m. A boult for a Crossebow; also, the Wythers of a horse, &c; also, a wring, or pinch in the Wythers; also, the Cudgell wherewith a Carrier, &c, winds vp, and straines hard, the cord he binds his packe withall.
Garroté: m. ée: f. Strained, or wound vp, as a pack-cord with a cudgell; also, hard tyed, or bound with cords.
Garrotement: m. The straining, or winding vp of a cord with a cudgell; also, a binding, or tying hard with cords.
Garroter. To straine, wring, or wind vp a pack-cord with a cudgell, &c; also, to bind fast in, tye hard with, cords, &c.
Garrulité: f. Garrulitie, prating, pratling, tatling, chattering, cackling, busie talking, much babling, ouermuch chat.
Gars: m. A lad, boy, stripling, youth, yonker; wag. Aller à gars. To hunt after lads; (a wench) to goe a caterwawling.
Garscher. To chap, as the hands, or lips doe in a sharpe wind. (v.m.)
Garse: f. A wench, lasse, girle; and (as we commonly vse the first) a punke, or whore; See Garce. Garsette: f. A yong lasse, little wench; pretie whore.
Garson: m. A lad, boy, youth, stripling; See Garçon. Faire le garson. To play the sot; vse apish, or childish, tricks.
Garson-fillette. An Hermaphrodite.
Garsonnaille: f. A crue of lads, a troupe of boyes.
Garsonner. To play the boy, or vse boyish tricks. Garsonner la femme d'autruy. To lye with another mans wife.
Garsonnet: m. A little boy.
Garsote: f. The water-fowle called, a Teale.
Garsouiller la femme d'autruy. as Garsonner. Garuche: f. A torturing wheele, vpon which the accused hauing heauie bolts, or yrons on his legs, is hoysed on high, vntill he confesse.
Garvences: f. Fitches; Chichlings.
Garum: m. Pickle of salt fish; or liquor wherein it hath beene resolued, or long soaked; See Garon. Garzignole: f. The name of a delicate Peare thats ripe in August.
Gasche: f. An Oare, or Scull to row with; also, a staple for a locke; (also, a cake. ¶Norm.) Gaschement: m. A rowing; also, a flashing, dashing, or plashing, as of water in rowing; also, a making of morter; or, a mingling and beating of lime, or clay with water, as in the making of morter.
Gascher. To row, or pull at an Oare; also, to dash, plash, flash (as water in rowing;) also, to make plaister, or morter; to beat lyme, clay, or sand and water together (as in the making of morter.) Gascher du gros. To shite; also, to spue; to purge vpwards, or downewards. Gascher du poisson (salé.) To water it, to cast water on it; or lay it in water.
Gaschettes pour tenir les doigts fermes. Splints for broken, or crooked, fingers.
Gascheur: m. A Rower; also, a flasher, or dasher of water.
Gascheux: m. euse: f. Flashie, plashie, washie, dashing, bespatling.
Gaschis d'eau: m. A dashing, plashing, or flashing of water, in rowing; See Gachis. Gascon: m. A Gascon; one of Gascoigne; also, the Mackerell (fish.)
Gasconner. To steale, filch, pilfer.
Gason: m. A greene sodd, a sodd of grassie earth; also, a banke made of, or hill couered with, greene sodds; any fine grassie, or mossie, banke.
Gasouillement: m. A warbling, whistling, or whizzing noyse.
Gasouiller. as Gazouiller. Gasouilleur: m. A warbler, chirper, whistler, or whizzer.
Gaspillé: m. ée: f. Wasted, lauished; carelesly, prodigally.
Gaspiller. To squander, wast, lash out, lauish away needlesly, carelesly, prodigally.
Gaspilleur: m. A spend-all, wast-good, vnthrift, lauisher, squanderer, prodigall and carelesse waster; whence; À pere amasseur fils gaspilleur: Prov. A wastfull sonne succeeds a wretched father.
Gasse: f. The weed called, Darnell, Ray, and Ivray.
Gast: m. Wast, spoyle, &c; or, as Gastement. Gastadour: m. A Pioner.
Gasté: m. ée: f. Marred, spild, spoyled; rotten, viciate, corrupted, wasted, cōsumed; ruined, defaced, ouerthrowne, destroyed, vndone; soyled, defiled, stained, peruerted; besotted.