The dictionary of syr Thomas Eliot knyght

About this Item

Title
The dictionary of syr Thomas Eliot knyght
Author
Elyot, Thomas, Sir, 1490?-1546.
Publication
Londini :: In ædibus Thomæ Bertheleti typis impress. Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum,
[Anno .M. D. XXXVIII. [1538]]
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Subject terms
English language -- Dictionaries -- Latin -- Early works to 1800.
English language -- Early modern, 1500-1700.
Latin language -- Dictionaries -- English -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21313.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The dictionary of syr Thomas Eliot knyght." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21313.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2024.

Pages

¶O, ANTE M.
  • OMasum, a fat gut, or chitterling.
  • Omen, minis, lucke, also a worde or sentence sodaynly spoken, after the which some thing hapneth to folowe ac∣cording thervnto, aboue the expectation of them which herde it.
  • Omentum, the call or sewet, wherein all the bowelles are lapped, also the thynne skyn in the heed, wherein the brayne is contay∣ned: of some called the ryme of the brayne, and of surgeons Pia mater.
  • Omentatus, ta, tum, mixt with sewet.
  • Ominor, aris, ari, & omino, aui, are, to gesse what shall happen or folowe.
  • Ominator, oris, he that telleth a mans lucke or fortune.
  • Ominosus, a, um, lucky.* 1.1
  • Omissus, a, um, left, not medled with. Omis∣so animo, Vbi te vidi animo esse omisso, whā I sawe that thou caryddest for nothinge.
  • Omitto, omisi, omittere, to forbeare, to leue, to neglect.
  • Omitte hunc, let hym alone, pardon hym.* 1.2
  • Omitte me, let me go.
  • Omne tulit punctū, he touched euery point, A prouerb. applyed to hym, whiche omit∣teth nothinge expedient or necessary, and is therfore of all men commendyd.
  • Omnibus numeris, in all poyntes. Res est o∣mnibus numeris absoluta, it is a thing per∣fyte in all poyntes.
  • Omnifariam, all maner of wayes, of euery kynde.
  • Omnifarius, a, um, sondrye, dyuerse,
  • Omnigenus, a, um, of euery kynde.
  • Omnimodus, da, dum, all maner.
  • Omnino, holy, throughly, allwaye, finally.
  • Omnipotens, tis, allmyghty.
  • Omnis, ne, all.
  • Omophagi, they which do eate raw fleshe.
  • Omphax, acis, a grape not fully rype.
  • Omphacium, licour made of frute that is not ripe, as of grapes, and than is it called veriuyse.
  • Omphacium vinum, a grene wyne not plea∣saunt or swete.
  • Omphacinum olcum, oyle made of olyues, not beinge rype.
  • Omutesco, tescere, to be dombe, and can not speke.

Notes

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