¶S ANTE Y.
- SYades, sterres callid also Hyades, seuen in number.
- Syagros, a wylde bore.
- Sybaris, a citie in Grecia.
- Sybarita, a man of that citie.
- Sybaritica mensa, a prouerbe applied to fea¦stes and bankettes, whyche doo excede in delycatenesse.
- Sybaritici libelli, wanton bokes.
- Sybaritici ludi, playes whyche are wanton and costly.
- Sybariticum carmen, a verse or poeme con∣taynynge wanton matter.
- Syboti, peple in the north part of the world.
- Sychaeus, a mans name.
- Sycion, he that fyrste founde garlandes.
- Sycomorus, a great tree lyke a fygge tree, whiche hath abundance of mylke, whose fruite commeth not oute of the toppes of the bowghes, as fygges doo, but oute of the same boughes, and swete like to a wild fygge: the graynes therof be les than the graines of figgis, & they be neuer ripe, ex∣cept they be scrapid wt an instrumēt of yrō.
- Sycophanta, he that falily accuseth an inno∣cent. Also a bearer of tales, or a cōplayner.
- Sycophantia, a fals accusation, deceite.
- Sycophantias struere, to deuyse, or inuente falsehoode.
- ...Sycophantor, tari, idem.
- ...Sycophantisso, are, idem.
- Sycophantiose, deceytefully by crafte.
- Sycon, olde wryters callyd a fygge.
- Sycosis, a dysease in the fundement, which maketh a warte lyke to a fygge.
- Sycosis, where within the eie lyd groweth a lyttell wart or other lyke thynge.
- Sydera, the plurell number of sydus.
- Syderatio, a spyce of the fallynge euyll in men, but in trees it is taken for blastynge.
- Sydus, syderis, a sterre.
- Syene, a citie in the confynes of Egypte and Ethiope.
- Sygeum, a promontorie of Troye.
- Syla, a mountayne in Lucania, & a wod in it.
- Sylla, a great tyrant of Rome, whiche was of an vnsaciable crueltie.
- Syllaba, a syllable.
- Syllabarim, by syllables.
- Syllabicus, ca, cum, pertaynyng to sillables.
- Syllanion, a famous maker of images, whi∣che was neuer taught.
- Syllepsis, a fygure, where the plurell num∣ber and the synguler are ioyned togyther, as socijs & rege recepto.
- Syllogismus, a perfyte argumente, whyche hath a necessarye conclusion.
- Sylua, a wodde or place ouergrowen with wedes, also any matter hastily writen with oute studye.
- Syluanus, was callyd the god of woddes.
- Syluaticus, ca, cum, pertaynyng to woddes.
- Syluecula, & syluula, a lyttell forest or wod.
- Syluesco, scere, to waxe or growe into wod∣des or bushes.
- Syluester, syluestris, tre, of a wodde or forest, woddy, wylde.
- Syluicola, he that dwelleth in a foreste or wodde.
- Syluius, a mannes name, whiche was borne in a foreste.
- Syma, a cytie in Asia.
- Symbolum, a collation. also a token gyuen by one to an other vpon certayn appoint∣mentes, generally a signe or mark to know a thynge by.
- Symbolus, a signet or sele, or a signe manuel.
- Symbulus, a wyse and good counsailour.
- Symmachia, ayde in battaile, or leage made amonge men of sondry countreys, to fight agaynst the other parte.
- Symmachus, a mannes name.
- Symmetria, a concorde in measure, where sondry thynges be of equall proporcion.
- Sympathia, a mutuall combination of thyn∣ges naturall in the operation of theyr po∣wers and qualities, as water in coldenesse dothe participate with erthe, in moysture with the ayre, the ayre with the fyre in heate, with water in moysture.
- Symphitum petreium, an herbe callyd bugle
- Symphitum magnum, comfrey.
- Symphonia, a consent in tune, also harmony.
- Symphoniacus, a syngynge boye.
- Symphonio, are, to agree or accord in one.
- Symphonesis, colysion of vowelles.
- Sympinaticae, women addicte to ceremonies or deuocion.
- Sympiniū, a cup seruīg for wyne in sacrifice.
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