212
The Record Interpreter.
- cavilla:—the ancle; a peg.
- cawagium:—a stall, cage, peri.
- caya:—a quay.
- caymiticus:—fratricidal, murderous (from Caym, a medieval form of Cain).
- cayrellus:—a quarel, a crossbow bolt.
- cayum:—a quay.
- cebum:—tallow.
- ceculicula:—a spark.
- cedula. See schedula.
- celarium:—as pence, a buttery, a cupboard.
- celatorium:—a coverlet.
- celda:—a chaldron, 36 bushels; the same as selda, a stall.
- celdra:—a chaldron.
- celena ferrea:—a scythe (?).
- celer:—the ceiler or canopy of a bed.
- celeragium:—cellarage, payment for storing goods in a cellar.
- celia:—ale made from wheat; wort.
- cella—a cell; a small monastery depending on a superior house; a close stool; a saddle (sella).
- cellarium:—a cellar.
- cellarius, cellerarius:—a cellarer.
- celura:—a ceiler.
- cementarius:—a mason.
- cenaculum:—breakfast or luncheon; a parlour.
- cenapium:—mustard.
- cendalum:—cendal, thin silken cloth.
- cendula:—wood for roofing a house.
- cenella:—an acorn.
- cenivectare:—to carry in a barrow.
- cenivectorium:—a mudcart, a wheel-barrow.
- censa:—rent; farm; tax.
- censaria, censeria:—a rent; a farm let at a standing rent.
- censarius:—a farmer.
- censualis:—a person bound to pay a rent to a monastery or church, in return for protection.
- censuarius:—a farmer.
- census:—tax, tribute.
- centena:—a hundredweight; a hundred.
- centenarius:—a petty judge under the sheriff; a hundredor; a centener, an officer commanding 100 soldiers.
- centenus, centuria:—the division of a county called a hundred.
- centonizare:—to arrange for singing.
- centuclum:—cloth.
- centum:—sometimes used declinable in the plural.
- ceola:—a long boat or ship; a keel.
- ceorlus:—a churl.
- cepa:—a sand eel (?).
- cepes:—a hedge (sepes).
- cephalia:—headache.
- cephalus:—a blockhead.
- ceppa:—stocks.
- ceppagium:—the stump of a tree.
- ceppus:—a stump.