230
The Record Interpreter.
- deverium:—duty.
- devestire:—to give up possession.
- devillare:—to leave town.
- devisamentum:—a devise; a device.
- devisare:—to devise; to bequeath.
- devisatio, devisum:—a devise.
- dextrale:—a bracer, a vambrace or wardbrace. (Fr. gardebras.)
- dextrare:—to turn to the right; to walk on the right of.
- dextrarius:—a war horse, a charger.
- deya. See data.
- deyla. See daila.
- diaconatus:—the office of deacon.
- diaconus:—a deacon.
- diapretus. See diasperatus.
- diarium:—daily food.
- diasperatus:— of various colours; diapered.
- diatim:—daily.
- dica:—a tally; a deed; foolish talking.
- diccus:—a dike.
- dicenarius. See decennarius.
- dicra:—a dicker, ten skins or pairs of gloves, ten bars of iron.
- dictator:—a person charged with the duty of considering and redressing infractions of a peace or truce; an umpire.
- dictor:—an umpire. Seedictator.
- dieta:—a day's journey; an assembly; regimen; diet, i.e., the daily scrapings of metal in taking assays at Goldsmiths' Hall, which wore periodically melted up; a daywork of land.
- diffacere:—to maim, to destroy.
- diffayium:—neglect.
- difficultas:—a tax.
- diffidare:—to defy; to renounce allegiance to; to warn off.
- diffodere:—to dig up.
- difforciare:—to deforce.
- difusculus:—diffuse.
- digitate:—a thimble.
- digitare:—to point at.
- dignarium:—a dinner.
- dilatura:—an accusation (delatura).
- diligiatus:—outlawed.
- dimidicare:—to halve.
- dimidietas:—a half, a moiety.
- dimissio:—demise, making over properties by lease or will.
- dimissoriæ literæ:—letters from a bishop for the ordination of a person in another diocese.
- diœcesis:—a diocese.
- dirationare. See disrationare.
- diribare:—to take away.
- dirmatia:— for A. S. deornett, a hunting net (?).
- disadvocare:—to deny, to disavow.
- disboscatio:—bringing woods into cultivation.
- discantus:—a chant.
- discare:—to make dishes.
- discarcare, discargare, discariare, discaricare, discarkare:—to unlade, to discharge.
- discifer:—a sewer; a steward.