Gens de mise. Persons of worth, sort, qualitie.
Mis-en-avant. mon m. My subiect, my matter, the thing which I haue propounded, or set on foot.
Miserable: com. Miserable, wretched, vnfortunate; piteous, wofull, ruthfull, distressefull; disasterous.
Miserablement. Miserably, wretchedly, wofully, ruthfully, distreßefully; disasterously.
Misere: f. Miserie, wretchednesse, distreße; aduersitie, calamitie; wofulnesse, or a wofull case; also, a poore drinke made of the water wherewith bee-hiues haue beene washed. Il suffit au jour de sa misere: Pro. One affliction suffices for one day.
Miserere. The name (and beginning) of one of the seuen (penitentiall) Psalmes. Miserere mei. A voiding of th' excrements vpwards; comes of th' obstruction of the small guts, and is verie painefull, the patient imagining that his guts are pulled out, and broken. Tu auras miserere iusques à vitulos. Thou shalt be soundly whipped.
Misericorde: f. Mercie, pitie, compassion, ruth, tendernesse. Espée misericorde. A waued sword.
Misericordieusement. Mercifully, compassionately, pitifully.
Misericordieux: m. euse: f. Mercifull, pitifull; compassionate.
Misque: m. Mosse.
Missal: m. ale: f. Of, or belonging to, the Masse. Pain missal. A kind of wafer made only of flower, and a little salt.
Missel: m. A Masse-booke.
Missile. feu missile. A squib, or other fire-worke throwne.
Mission: f. as Mise; Expence, disbursement, charge: ¶Bourgongnon. Missive: f. A letter missiue; a letter sent.
Missotage: m. Masserie, Masse trinkets, Masse-stuffe; things belonging to the Masse.
Missotier: m. ere: f. Masse-monging, Masse-making; of the Masse.
Mistagogue: m. A teacher, or interpreter of mysteries, and ceremonies; also, a keeper of the Churches Reliques.
Miste: com. Neat, spruce, compt, quaint, picked, minion, trickesie, fine, gay.
Mistement. Neatly, sprucely, comptly, quaintly, finely, gaily, minion-like.
Mistigouri. My pillicocke, my prettie rogue: ¶Norm. Mistion: f. A mixture, mash, medley, melling, blending; a confounding; a sophistication.
Mistionné: m. ée: f. Mixed, mingled, melled, blent; sophisticated by mixture.
Mistionnement: m. A mixing, mingling, melling, blending, medley-making; sophisticating.
Mistionner. To mix, mingle, mash, mell, blend or temper with, make a medley of; to falsifie, adulterate, sophisticate, by mixture.
Mistoudin: m. A neat fellow, a spruce companion.
Mistrouille: f. A foule great slut, a filthie draggletaile: ¶Norm. Misy: m. A caustick drug, or minerall of a golden colour, and luster; found growing in little peeces, about, or aboue, naturall Chalcitis; whereunto it is like in vertue, and operation, though in temperature it be the more subtile of the two.
Mitaille: f. Great (or the grossost) file-dust.
Mitaines: f. Mittaines, Winter-gloues. Ils ne se laissent prēdre ? -P1] from context -P2] sans mitaines. They will not be taken without mittains; viz. much preparation, or adoe.
Mitan: m. The middest, or middle of: ¶Norm. Mitanier: m. ere: f. Middle, of the middest.
Mitaut. la Region du m. The middle Region of the aire.
Mite: f. A Mite, the smallest of coynes; also, the little worme, called a Mite. Herbe aux mites. Moth-Mullein.
Mithologie: f. Mithologie; an expounding, or moralizing, of fables.
Mithologiquement. Mithologikely; by a morall exposition of fables.
Mithre: f. Looke Mitre. Mithridat: m. Mithridatum; Looke Methridat. Mitifier. To soften; disgest, concoct.
Mitigatif: m. iue: f. Mitigatiue, lenitiue, appeasiue.
Mitigation: f. A mitigation, qualification, allaying, tempering, assuaging, appeasing.
Mitigué: m. ée: f. Mitigated, qualified, moderated, allayed, assuaged, appeased.
Mitiguer. To mitigate, qualifie, temper, moderate, ease, assuage, allay, appease.
Mi-tirer. To draw out the halfe of.
Mitis. Nice, curious, precise; hypocriticall.
Miton: m. (The small worme, or vermine called) a Mite.
Mitou: m. A great cat. Faire le mitou. To dissemble, or play the hypocrite; to put on a lowlie, meeke, humble, or afflicted countenance; to looke poorely, or pitifully on it.
Mitoüard: m. A cat; also, an hypocrite: ¶Rab. Mitouflé: m. ée: f. Furred like a cat, or with cats skins; hidden in, wrapped, or lapped about with furres, or cat-furred garments.
Mitouïn: m. An hypocrite; a dissembler vnder the protection of a meeke, and lowlie countenance.
Mitoyen. as Moitoyen. Mitraille: f. Broken brasse, or copper; or lumpes consisting of diuers mettalls, which haue beene mingled, and melted together.
Mitrant. Hooding, or crowning, with a miter.
Mitre: f. A Bishops miter; also, the hole (or cap) of a mans yard. Donner la mitre, & la crosse à. To set a specious gloße of Religion on; or to authorize (an ill thing) by a goodlie shew of deuotion.
Mitré: m. ée: f. Mitred; hooded with a miter, wearing a miter; set on a pillorie, or scaffold, with a miter of paper on his head.
Mitrement: m. A mitring; a hooding, crowning, or couering of the head with a miter; for ornament, or in disgrace.
Mitrer. To hood, crowne, or couer the head with a miter, of rich stuffe for ornament (as at the consecration of a Bishop;) or of paper in disgrace.
Mixtion. as Mistion. Mixtionné, & Mixtionner. as Mistionné, & Mistionner. Mizone: f. The name of a delicate Italian peare thats ripe in August.
Mnadies. Barbarously for Bona dies. God-denne to you: ¶Rab. Mobile: com. Mouable, which may be remoued.
Mobiliaire: com. as Mobile.
Mobilité: f. Mouableneße; a wagging, flitting, wa-*