Trainer son Lien. See Lien. Trainer longuement. To be long sicke of a disease, to languish a great while. Trainer longue queuë. To continue long, or be a great while, in doing; also, to be of great consequence, haue a farre reach, carrie full many things along with it. Trainer sa parole. To speake dreamingly, draylingly, draw-latch-like; also, to smooth, claw, gloze, flatter, fawne on, collogue with; (for commonly such as wire-draw their speech are notable dissemblers.)
Traineresse. whence; Bonnettes traineresses. The drablers for a Saile.
Trainiere: f. Common Trefoile, three-leaued grasse, Irish Shamrocks, Cockheads, Suckles, Honisuckles.
Trainoir: m. A sled; a drag, or dray without wheeles.
Trainon: m. A drag-net, or dray-net for fish.
Trainquenailles: m. Scoundrells, ragamuffins, base rascalls, flabergudgions.
Traïon: m. The teat, or nipple of a cowes vdder.
Traïot: m. A milking Pale, or Piggin.
Traire vne vache. To milke, or draw milke from, a Cow.
Traistre: m. A traitor; a treacherous, or disloyall person; also, a naughtie-packe; a lewd, or wicked fellow.
Traistreau: m. A young, or little traitor.
Traistrement. Traiterously, treacherously, most disloyally, or faithlesly.
Traistreusement. The same.
Trait. Looke Traict. Traite: f. A draught, or drawing out in length; also, a course, trace, progresse, or proceeding; also, a transportation, vent outward, shipping ouer; and an Imposition vpon commmodities exported, or so transported; See Traicte. Traite de bleds; &, Traite foraine. Looke Bled; & Forain. Traité, & Traiter. See Traicté, & Traicter. Traitif. as Traictif. Tramail: m. A Trammell, or net for Partridges.
Tramaillé: m. ée: f. Treble-mailed; or wouen, bound, or insnared by treble mashes, or mailes.
Tramailler. To weaue, bind, fasten, or insnare by three-*fold mashes, or mailes.
Tramer: m. A Weauer.
Tramblotis: m. A trembling.
Trame. as Traime. Tramé: m. ée: f. Wouen, contriued.
Trameau: m. A kind of Drag-net, or Draw-net for fish; also, a Trammell net for fowle; also, a sled, or dray, without wheeles.
Tramer. To weaue, to contriue.
Trameter. To continue a suit, or hold on a pursute.
Trameul: m. A Mill hopper.
Tramillon: m. A kind of little Drag-net, or Draw-net for fish.
Tramois: m. Meslin of Oats, and Barlie mingled.
Tramontain: m. aine: f. Northerlie, comming from, or dwelling in, the North.
Tramontaine: f. The North; North-wind, or starre.
Tranchaison. as Trenchée. Tranchant. Looke Trenchant. Tranche: f. A kind of pruning knife, or instrument, vsed by Gardeners; also, a slice of any thing.
Tranchefile. Seeke Trenchefile.
Tranchelion: m. A notable trencher-man: ¶Rab.
Tranche-montaigne: m. A swash-mountaine, terrible swash-buckler, horrible swaggerer.
Tranche-plume: f. A Penknife.
Trancher. Looke Trencher. Tranchet d'un Cordoüannier. A Shoomakers paring, or cutting knife.
Trançon: m. A truncheon; also, a little peece of.
Trangle. as Tringle. Tranquille: com. Calme, vntroubled, without surges, quiet, still, husht, peaceable, peacefull.
Tranquillement. Calmly, quietly, stilly, peaceably, without any manner of trouble.
Tranquiller. To calme, still, quiet, pacifie, appease.
Tranquillité: f. Tranquilitie, stillnesse, calmeneße, quietnesse, peaceableneße; a calme; rest.
Tranquilliter. as Tranquiller. Transacteur: m. A transactor, dayes-man, accorder, match-maker.
Transaction: f. A transaction, accord, agreement, attonement.
Transailles: f. Corne sowed in the Spring, as Barlie, Oates, &c.
Transalpin: m. ine: f. Forrein, Italian, beyond the Alpes, on the further side of the mountaines.
Transanimation: f. Pythagoras his Metempsycosa; or the passage of the soule from one bodie to another.
Transcendant. Transcendant, surmounting, surpassing, exceeding.
Transchangement: m. An alteration, or changing ouer into another qualitie, or nature.
Transcoulation: f. A gliding, slipping, running, a drilling, trilling or trickling, through.
Transcoulé. Glid, slid, slipped, runne, trilled, trickled, strained through; also, set packing, pumped, or let run out.
Transcouler. To glide, slide, slip, runne, trill, or trickle, (also, to straine) through; also, to set packing, to pumpe, or let runne, out.
Transcrire. To transcribe, to write or copie out.
Transcrit: m. ite: f. Transcribed, written out, copied forth.
Transcrivain: m. A Transcriber, a bare copier out of other mens writings.
Transe: f. Extreame feare, dread; anxietie, or perplexitie of mind; also, a traunce, or sowne; a great astonishment, amazement, or appallment. Dormer en transe. To be dog asleepe, to be in a deepe or dead sleepe.
Transenter. To graffe out of one stocke into another; to take a graffe out of one stocke, and set it in another.
Transferé: m. ée: f. Transferred, transmitted, posted or paßed ouer vnto.
Transfiguration: f. A transfiguration, or transformation.
Transfigurer. To transfigure, transforme, turne out of one shape into another.
Transfondre. To powre, deriue, or passe out of one vessell into another; to transferre, to transpose.
Transformation: f. A transformation; a change of forme, an alteration of shape.
Transformer. To transforme, alter, change, turne out of one shape into another.
Transfretter. Hastily to paße ouer, or along.
Transfuge: m. A runne-away; one that runnes to, and sides with, a publicke enemie.
Transfuyard: m. as Transfuge.