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The Record Interpreter.
- molumentum:—toll for grinding.
- moluius (molitus):—ground.
- monaca, monacha:—a nun.
- monachaliter:—in monkish fashion.
- monacare, monachare:—to make a man a monk; to receive him into a convent.
- monacus, monachus:—a monk.
- monagium:—error for menagium.
- monasterialis:—monastic.
- monasterium:—a monastery, a minster.
- moneta: - money; a mint.
- monetacio:—coining, minting.
- monetagium:—mintage, right of coining; tribute paid by tenants to the lord that he should not change the money he had coined.
- monetare:—to coin; to mint.
- monetarius:—a moneyer; a coiner; a banker.
- monetatio:—coining.
- monetum:—a mint.
- moniale:—a nunnery; a mullion.
- monialis:—a nun.
- monstru:—a muster.
- monatrantia:—a reliquary, a monstrance, or ooster.
- monstrare:—to muster.
- monstratio:—a muster.
- monstrum:—a muster; a reliquary.
- moota:—a searaew or seagull. (Fr. mouette.) See also mota, muta.
- mora:—a moor; a mere.
- moracum:—pure wine (merum). See moratum.
- moragium:—rent or service for tenure of moorland.
- moratum:— a drink, supposed to be wine flavoured with mulberries.
- morgaculum:—the tongue of a buckle.
- moretum:—brown cloth. See also moratum.
- morgabulum:—rent of moorland.
- morgagium:—mortgage.
- morgagifa. See morganegiba.
- morganegiba:—the husband's gift to the wife on the wedding-day, or the day after.
- moriatio:—residence.
- morina:—murrain.
- morosus:—boggy; delaying.
- morsella:—a small piece [of land].
- morsellatim:—piecemeal.
- morsellus. See morsella.
- morsus:—a morse; a clasp.
- mortarium:—mortar; a mortar; a stone or metal cup to hold a night light; a lamp over a grave or shrine. See also mortuarium.
- mortellum. See mortarium.
- mortgngium:—a mortgage.
- morticinium:—murrain.
- mortifcare:—to alienate in mortmain.
- mortitivus:—dead of murrain.
- mortizare. See amortizare.
- mortua sesona:—close time for foxes, in the forests, 1 May to 1 Sept.