| aglopened | Frightened, startled. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| balan | A strong stuff made of tow. | 1340 | Go To Quotation |
| balgh | Round, rounded; ? swelling. | 1340 | Go To Quotation |
| barmkin | The battlement of the outer fortification of a castle; the outer fortification, or… | 1340 | Go To Quotation |
| bercelet | A hunting dog, a hound. | 1340 | Go To Quotation |
| bibbing | Continued or repeated drinking; tippling. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| bland | prep. among. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| brush | A forcible rush, a hostile collision or encounter; in later use, chiefly a short but smart encounter. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| brush | intr. To rush with force or speed, usually into collision. Obs. exc. as influenced by brush v.: see quot. 1863 4. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| busked | Clothed, attired; dressed up; adorned, embellished. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| cadge | trans. ? To fasten, tie: cf. cadgel v. (The early passages are obscure, and for one or… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ceil | To cover with a lining of woodwork, sometimes of plaster, etc. (the interior roof or walls… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| chalk-white | White like chalk. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| chalter | trans. ? To bind, fetter. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cityless | Without a city or cities, having no city. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cityward | Toward, or in the direction of, the city (orig. to the city-ward). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cleek | An act of cleeking, a clutch. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| clocher | An apartment, room. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| closer | An enclosed space or place; a closet. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| clynterand | ? pres. pple. of clunter n.; but very possibly a misreading of clintes and: see clint n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| coggle | A rounded water-worn stone, esp. of the size suitable for paving; a cobble. More fully coggle-stone. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| colkin | ? To gasp. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| colwer | ? A snake, adder. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| commending | The action of commend v.; commendation. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| conqueress | A female conqueror. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cop | A spider. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| coronacle | = coronal n. (See also crownacle n.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| coronest | Choicest. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cowdrife | App. a scribal error in MS. for cocodrise = cockatrice. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crab | trans. To go counter to, to cross; to put out of humour or temper; to irritate, anger, enrage, provoke. Sc. ? Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crab-fish | = crab n. 1. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cradle | trans. To lay or place in, or as in, a cradle; to rock to sleep. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crathon | A term of depreciation: (app.) Craven, caitiff. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crayfish | Formerly, like German krebs, a general name for all the larger edible crustacea. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crazed | Broken, cracked; flawed, damaged. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cree | To create. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| crestyn | A sort of pannier. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| cure | = cury n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| dain | Disdain, dislike, distrust. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| dain | Syncopated form of dedain, disdain v. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| danger | To render liable. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| debate | intr. To abate, fall off, grow less. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| depure | trans. To free from impurity, cleanse, purify (lit. and fig.); = depurate v. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| destinate | as pple. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| dewess | A goddess. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| disperson | trans. To treat with indignity, insult. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| distress | To constrain by force or infliction of suffering (to do a thing, into, out of something). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| disworship | The opposite of worship; the withholding of esteem, regard, or honour; dishonour, disgrace, discredit. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| drabble | intr. To become wet and dirty by dabbling in, or trailing through, water or mire. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| dreight | = dreigh n. 1. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ducking | That ducks, dives into water or bows the head. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| dwining | One who pines away, a sickly creature. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| earl | trans. ? To be the lord of. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| earth | orig. Sc. To bury (a corpse); also with up. In later use poet. or Brit. regional. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| easing | = eavesing n. 2. Also in comb., as easing-drops, easing-sparrow. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| eld | Middle English ane eld = a neld, a needle n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| elken | ? To flatter, propitiate. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| emong | = among prep. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| enfamish | trans. To famish, starve. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| enfeoff | trans. To invest with a fief; to put (a person) in possession of the fee-simple or… | 1400 | Go To Quotation |
| enhere | trans. ? To possess as an inheritance. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ethe | trans. To ask with an oath; to adjure. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| evens | In the evening. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| everylike | Ever in like fashion; continually; in later dialectal use, from time to time; at intervals. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| famish | trans. To reduce to the extremities of famine and hunger; to starve. Also, to famish away. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| farthingdeal | gen. A fourth part. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| fearless | Unaffected by fear; bold, intrepid. Const. of; rarely, with inf. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| feat | trans. To equip, furnish, make fit. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| feddle | One who is made much of; a pet, favourite. Also attrib. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| feeder | fig. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| feloure | Foliage. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| fender | = defender n. Obs. exc. dial. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ferdship | Terror. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ferly | intr. To wonder. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| fettle | trans. To make ready, put in order, arrange. Now only dial. to put to rights, ‘tidy… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| filling | That which fills or is used to fill a cavity or vacant space, to stop a tooth or a hole, to… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| foaming | That foams. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| folity | Foolishness. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| foodless | Of a person or animal: having no food. Also fig. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| forcelet | A little fort or fortress. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| foul | trans. To trample, tread, tread down. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| founce | The bottom of anything. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| furlength | = furlong n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| galt | A boar or hog. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| garnish | To fit out with anything that adorns or beautifies; to decorate, ornament, or… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| genosophis | (See gymnosophist n.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gill | attrib., as gill-brack (see brack n. 8), gill-edge, gill-runnel, gill-stream. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gilten | Gilt, gilded; golden. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| glace | Ice. on a glace: frozen. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gladen | ? A space left unguarded. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| glam | Any loud noise, as shouting, loud or merry talk, barking of dogs, etc.; also, a shout, cry. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| glaver | Chatter; loud noise. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| glitter | intr. To shine with a brilliant but broken and tremulous light; to emit bright fitful flashes of light; to gleam, sparkle. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| glode | (Meaning uncertain: perh. a misreading.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gloom | Of the weather, the sky, etc.: To lower, look dark or threatening; to be or to become dull and cloudy. Also fig. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gloring | Shining, glittering. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gore | trans. To pierce or stab deeply, with a sharp weapon, spike, spur, or the like. Obs. exc. as in 2. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gote | A watercourse; any channel for water; a stream. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| grade | trans. To degrade. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| granate | = garnet n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| grand | the Grand: = ‘the Great’ as an epithet of a famous person, city, or country. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| Grecan | Grecian, Greek. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gride | A spasm of pain, a pang. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gride | trans. To pierce with a weapon; to wound; †also, to inflict (a wound) by piercing (obs.). Also with away. Obs. or arch. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| grig | A diminutive person, a dwarf. Obs. rare. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| grim | intr. To be angry, look fierce. Const. at, on, to. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| groove | A mining shaft; a mine, pit. Now dial. †Also, in 15th c., a cave (obs.). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| grub | A short, dwarfish fellow. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gules | Red, as one of the heraldic colours; in engraving represented by vertical lines. Hence poet.… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| gymnosophist | One of a sect of ancient Hindu philosophers of ascetic habits (known to the Greeks… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hanch | trans. and intr. To snatch, snap at, or bite with violent or noisy action of the jaws… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hand-ball | A ball for throwing with the hand. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| helder | More; rather. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| heldest | Most, foremost, soonest. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| herse | trans. To glorify or extol. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hersoun | trans. To glorify, do honour to. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| heter | Rough; fierce, violent, cruel; severe; keen, eager. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hightle | trans. To adorn, ornament; = hight v. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hilla | = hillo int. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hithertoward | = hitherto adv. adj. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| horse-flesh | Living horses collectively, usually with reference to riding, driving, or racing. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hurkle | intr. To draw the limbs and parts of the body closely together, esp. with pain or… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hurl | ? The rush (of water); swirl. rare. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hurtless | Free from hurt; unhurt. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| hyne | From this world; out of this life. (baith) heir and hyne, both in this world and the next. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| ice | To cover or cause to be covered with ice, as a result of freezing temperatures. Freq. in pass. | 1499 | Go To Quotation |
| impark | trans. To enclose or shut up in a park, as beasts of the chase; hence gen. to confine, shut up. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| Indois | pl. Indians. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| inhabiting | The action of the verb inhabit v.; habitation, dwelling; †a dwelling-place. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| inkling | Mentioning in an undertone; a faint or slight mention, report, or rumour; chiefly in phrase to hear… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| jazerant | ‘A light coat of armour composed of splints or small plates of metal rivetted to each other… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| jetting | Ostentatious in gait or behaviour; showy; strutting, swaggering. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| joyless | Destitute of joy; having, feeling, or manifesting no joy; sad, cheerless. †Sometimes const. of. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| kindlaik | Kindness. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| kokell | ? Unsteady, wavering, shaky. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| lave | Of ears: Drooping, hanging. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| lear | Instruction, learning; in early use †a piece of instruction, a lesson; †also, a doctrine, religion. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| lessen | trans. To make less in size, quantity, amount, scope, etc.; to diminish. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| light-hearted | Having a light heart; not oppressed by care or sorrow; cheerful, gay. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| littlelaik | Littleness. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| liver | Delivered (of a child); = deliver adj. 3. rare. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| loudly | With reference to dress: Flashily, showily. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| love-lay | A love song. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| low | intr. To flame, blaze, glow; fig. to glow, be ‘on fire’ with passion, etc. Also with up. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| mag | trans. To mangle; to cut up. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| maideux | so maideux: ‘so help me God!’. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| mambler | A voluble speaker. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| masterlike | In the manner of a master. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| maun | = may v. 5, 6. rare. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| midfield | The middle of a field (in any sense). Now chiefly poet. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| midst | The middle point, part, or position (spatially or temporally); = middle adj. 1. Obs. (arch. in later use). | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| muld | Perh.: a tribute, an offering. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| murgeon | Originally: dirt, refuse, dregs. Later: wet peaty soil; mortar or cement from old walls, esp. used as manure. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| musardry | Foolish or idle dreaming; sloth. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| nab | A projecting or jutting part of a hill or rock; a peak, a promontory; a rocky or prominent hill, a summit, etc. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| nekard | An insignificant or contemptible person. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| nemel | Perh. = enamel n. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| nicking | = inkling n. 1. | 1499 | Go To Quotation |
| nurtured | That is or has been nurtured (in various senses of the verb). Chiefly as the second… | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| nychomet | A piece of onyx. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| obeyance | Obedience, obeying; obeisance, homage; an instance of this. Also: †authority, sway (obs.). | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| origin | The fact of being born from a particular ancestor or race; parentage, ancestry, extraction, pedigree. Also in pl. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| ossing | A presaging; a prophecy. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| out-by | Out a little way; a short distance out; out of doors; (Mining) near to the mine shaft… | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| overlaik | Superiority, supremacy. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| overlend | trans. To pass over or beyond. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| peg | trans. (refl.). To gorge, stuff oneself. Obs. rare. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| pentest | A kind of precious stone (not identified). | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| pier | A stone. franche pier n. Obs. a block of building stone. precious pier n. Obs. a precious stone. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| pirn | Prob.: a twig or branch. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| planir | Flat, level. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| plunge | A deep pool; a place where one may plunge. at the plunge: (Sc.) immersed. Obs. (Eng. regional in later use). | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| powerful | Of a person or group of people: having power over others; holding control or influence… | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| presidence | The action or fact of presiding; control, authority. | 1499 | Go To Quotation |
| project | A plan, draft, scheme, or table of something; a tabulated statement; a design or… | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| quern | Perh.: a large piece of ice; a crack or crevice in a piece of ice. Obs. rare. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| rankness | The quality or condition of being rank (in various senses). | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| rasteling | Perh.: a disturbance, a commotion. | 1499 | Go To Quotation |
| rifeness | The state or condition of being rife. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| rissom | A head of corn, oats, or other grain. Also risom head. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| sagely | In a sage manner. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sailer | One who sails. Now rare. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| salute | An utterance, gesture, or action of any kind by which one person salutes another… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sapient | = sapience n. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| satraper | A satrap. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| scaled | Having or furnished with scales, as a fish or a serpent; scaly. Now rare exc. as second… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| scare | Fear, dread. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| scaut | intr. ? To dart. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| schirk | trans. To brighten. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| schur | A shed, hovel. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| scoleye | intr. To attend school; to study as a scholar. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| scythed | Furnished with a scythe; esp. Hist. (= Greek δρεπανηϕόρος, Latin falcatus)… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sea-bottom | The bottom or lowest depth of the sea; a tract of ground covered by a sea. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sea-bull | The male of the sea-cow or seal. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sensitive | Having the function of sensation or sensuous perception. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| senture | A girdle. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| serelepy | Separate; with pl. n., sundry, various. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| Seres | With pl. concord. The name of a people anciently inhabiting some part of Eastern… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| serety | Variety. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| shivering | That shivers (in various senses of the verb); shattering, breaking, splintering. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| shog | refl. (obs.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sic | Followed by a (or †ane). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sile | To fall or sink (down). Also dial., to subside. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| size | trans. To regulate or control, esp. in relation to a fixed standard. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| skelp | trans. To strike, beat, slap, smack, in later use spec. on the breech. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sliming | Defiling with slime; slimy. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| slowful | Slack, slow, sluggish. | 1400 | Go To Quotation |
| snape | (Meaning uncertain.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| snape | trans. To be hard upon; to harm, damage, or injure in some way. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| snart | Severe, strong. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| snater | intr. To stumble. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sniddle | Coarse grass, rushes, or sedge. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| snipping | Nipping, biting with cold. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sny | intr. To move, proceed. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| soil | The earth or ground; the face or surface of the earth. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sot | To render foolish or doltish; to stupefy, to besot. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sound | Without harm or injury; in safety or security; safely. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| spar | intr. To dart or spring; to strike or thrust rapidly. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| spareless | Unstinted, unlimited. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| spene | (Meaning obscure.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| spite | trans. To regard with contempt or spite. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| staff-full | Quite full. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stair | trans. To ascend. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stamping | The action of stamp v., in various senses. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| staring | Shining; bright-coloured. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stedill | trans. To array (soldiers), draw up in order. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stig | intr. To start in alarm. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stoned | Built of stone; fortified with stone. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| straight | refl. and intr. To direct one's course, go. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| strake | trans. To sound (a particular call) on the horn. Also absol. or intr. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| streaming | Of light or other effluence: Issuing in a full stream. Of a luminous body: Emitting a stream of rays or beams. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stull | A great piece or hunch (of anything edible). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| stumbling | The action of the verb stumble v., in various senses. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sulp | trans. To defile, pollute. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| surger | A surgeon. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| susprise | = supprise v. 1 – 2. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| swafe | A swinging stroke or blow; momentum. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| sway | Often with down: To go down, fall (lit. and fig.); spec. to fall or sink into a swoon. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| swelme | The heat (of anger or the like). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| swimble | intr. To feel dizzy. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| swing | A stroke with a weapon. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| Syrian | A native or inhabitant of Syria, historically a region of Western Asia immediately east… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tache | intr. To make a (hostile) charge or attack; to charge. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| taite | Gladness, alacrity. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tallow | trans. To smear or anoint with tallow; to grease (formerly esp. the bottom of a ship or boat). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tang | trans. †To pierce; to prick (obs.); to sting as a serpent or an insect. Also absol. (Now dial.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| target | A light round shield or buckler; a small targe. Also fig. Now chiefly Hist. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tere | Difficult, tedious, tiresome, toilsome. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tethy | Of uncertain origin and meaning. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| Tetragrammaton | A word of four letters; spec. the Hebrew word written yhwh or jhvh (vocalized as y a hw e h, j… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| texalte | = to exalt v.: see t' prep. and exalt n. | 1450 | Go To Quotation |
| thrill | A hole or aperture; esp. a nose-thirl n., nostril. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| throng | In various early instances difficult to explain, all connected with thring v. Among these… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| throttle | trans. To stop the breath of by compressing the throat, to strangle; to kill in… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tine | Very small, diminutive: = tiny adj. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tip | To overthrow, knock, or cast down, cause to fall or tumble; to overturn, upset; to throw… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tirement | Attire; pl. articles of attire; garments, or ornaments as a whole. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tout | intr. To peep, peer, look out; to gaze; = toot v. 2. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| townless | Having no town or towns; devoid of towns. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tram | A mechanical contrivance; a machine, an engine; an implement, instrument, tool; in… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| transmit | trans. To cause (a thing) to pass, go, or be conveyed to another person, place, or thing… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| trellis | A structure of light bars of wood or metal crossing each other at intervals and fastened… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| trellis | trans. To furnish with a trellis or with lattice-work; to enclose in a trellis or grating. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| trembling | That trembles, in various senses of the verb. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| trine | intr. To go, march, step. (Chiefly in allit. verse.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| triple | trans. To make three times as great or as many as before; to multiply by three; to make threefold; to treble. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tuck | trans. and intr. To touch (rare); to beat the drum; also intr. of a drum: To sound. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| tulk | A man. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| turr | intr. and trans. To butt, as a ram; to push down by butting. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| twinlepi | Twofold, double. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unably | In an unable or incapable manner. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| uncalled | Not called or summoned; not invited. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unchance | Mischance, misfortune. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| uncorrumped | Uncorrupted. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| uncorsayed | (un- prefix 8. Sense doubtful.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| undead | Not dead; alive. Also, not quite dead but not fully alive, dead-and-alive. In… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| undistrained | (un- prefix 8.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| undisturbled | (un- prefix 8.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unghostly | †Unspiritually. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unhemmed | Unconfined, unrestrained. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unhone | Absence of delay; haste. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unhonourable | Not honourable; not deserving of honour. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unlap | To unfold; to spread open. Also intr. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unmeetly | = unmeet adj. 1b. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unreproved | (un- prefix 8.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unsamen | Not in union or harmony. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unseason | in unseason, out of season. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unseized | (un- prefix 8.) | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unsummed | Not summed up; uncounted. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unsure | Not safe against attack or mishap; liable to danger or risk; exposed to hazard or peril; insecure. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unweetingly | Unknowingly; unconsciously; †without it being known. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| unyark | trans. To undo or open (a gate). | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| up-sun | Sc. Between sunrise and sunset. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| vaunt | Boasting, bragging; boastful or vainglorious language or utterance; arrogant assertion or bearing. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| vaunt | refl. To boast, extol, glorify, or praise (oneself). Usu. const. for, of, or in. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| vaward | Mil. = vanguard n. 1. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| verdure | Green vegetation; plants or trees, or parts of these, in a green and flourishing state. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| viance | Food, sustenance. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| vice | Design, figure, device. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wall-eyed | of human beings. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wap | at a wap: at one blow, suddenly. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wap | intr. To strike, knock upon; to strike through. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| warble | trans. ? To proclaim by flourish of trumpets; ? to sound (a trumpet). Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| warderer | A warder or truncheon. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| warlock | dial. (See quot.) Cf. warrok v. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| watchman | A member of a military guard, a sentinel or sentry; a look-out posted to give warning… | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wavesch | trans. To put aside. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| whirr | Violent or rapid movement, rush, hurry; the force or impetus of such movement. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| whirr | To throw or cast with violence and noise; to fling, hurl. Obs. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| whistly | Silently, quietly, softly, without noise. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| whosomever | = whoever pron., whosoever pron. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| windless | Breathless, out of breath. Now rare. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wrawed | Angry, wroth; perverse. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wreathen | = wreathed adj. 1. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| wroth | Deep anger or resentment; wrath, rage, or fury; ire. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |
| yeder | Quick; frequent. | 1399 | Go To Quotation |