Glossary of Latin Words.
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- esketor:—a robber.
- eskiper, gen. eskipri:—the skipper of a ship.
- eskippa. See esceppa.
- eskippare:—to equip.
- eskirmire:—to fence.
- esmaelitus:—enamelled.
- esnamiare:—to distrain.
- esnecca:—a ship.
- esnecia, esnaccha, esnechia:—primogeniture; the limited right of primogeniture of the eldest coparcener.
- espaltare, espeltare. See expedilare.
- esperdum:—an axe (O. E. sparthe).
- esperiolus:—a squirrel.
- esperkeria:—a duty on dried fish in the Channel Islands, consisting of a right of pre-emption of congers; 2d. Tournois on every 100 mackerel; 2 sols Tournois on every bushel of fish; and 2d. on every salt conger exported to Normandy or elsewhere, not in the kingdom of England.
- espervarius, esperverius:—a sparrow-hawk (accipiter fringillarius).
- espicurnantia:—the office of spigurnel.
- espleta. See expletiæ.
- espletiamenta. See expletiæ.
- essaetor:—an assayer.
- essaia:—say, sometimes means fine woollen cloth (serge), sometimes silk. (Fr. soie.)
- essarta, essartum. See assartum.
- essonia:—essoin, excuse for non-appearance at a court baron, &c.
- essoniare:—to give an excuse; to essoin.
- essoniator:—an essoiner.
- essonium. See essonia.
- establiamentum:—a settlement.
- estallagium. See stallagium.
- estallamentum:—a mortgage; pawning; an instalment.
- estallare:—to mortgage; to pawn.
- estangnum:— a pond (stagnum); a bank or stank; a measure of land less than an acre.
- esterlingus:—an Easterling; sterling.
- estermannus:—a pilot.
- estintus. See eastintus.
- estoverium:—estovers, allowance of wood for repairs, or of necessary food and clothes; stover, provender.
- estreciare:—to make narrow; to straiten
- estrepamentum, estrepinamentum:—estrepement, injury done to lands by a tenant for life.
- estresius:—an Easterling.
- estuffamentum:—stuff; material.
- esturare. See escurare.
- esturus. See austur.
- esuniare:—to essoin.
- esuniator:—an essoiner.
- eucharistia:—the sacrament; the consecrated bread; a ciborium.