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<TEXT>
<BODY>
<DIV1 TYPE="glossary">
<DIV2 TYPE="part" N="A">
<LIST>
<LABEL>
<PB REF="1" N="209">
<HI>Athened.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Extended,</HI> stretched out.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Atugon,</HI> or
<HI>Atogon</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Drawne.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Awritten.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>Written.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Awarpen,</HI> or
<HI>Awurpen.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Throwne or cast.</HI>
<P>We call in some parts of
<HI>England,</HI> a moule, a
<HI>Mould-warp,</HI> which is asmuch to say, as a
<HI>cast-earth,</HI> and when planks or bords are awry we say they cast, or they warpe.
<HI>And|warpe,</HI> anciently
<HI>Hand-warpe,</HI> tooke that name, as is sayd, of hands being there cut off, and cast into the river of
<HI>Skeld.</HI></P></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Awild,</HI> or
<HI>Aweld.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Welded.</HI> Or managed by strength.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Awirgud.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Accursed,</HI> also strangled or throtled, whereof we yet have the word
<HI>Wurried.</HI></ITEM></LIST></DIV2>
<DIV2 TYPE="part" N="B">
<LIST>
<HEAD>B</HEAD>
<LABEL>
<HI>BAld.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Bold,</HI> it also signifieth swift or suddaine.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Berne.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>A
<HI>Child.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bearna,</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Children.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Berne.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>A barne, for the keeping of Corne.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bebode,</HI> or
<HI>gebode,</HI> or
<HI>beod.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Bidden,</HI> or commanded.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bebodun.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Commandements.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bebiriged.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Buried.</HI> See
<HI>Birig.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beclipt.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Imbraced.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bead</HI> or
<HI>Gibead.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Prayer.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Gebeadun,</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>Prayers. Hereof com|meth the name of Beads (they being made to pray on) as also of Beads-men.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bead-faring.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>Going on Pilgrimage.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Begeond.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Beyond.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Bist.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Bee-ist,</HI> as thou bist, for thou art.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beleawd.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Betrayed.</HI> We yet call a naughty person, a levd fellow, which by the right signification of the Word, is as|much to say as a trothlesse or perfidious fellow.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beloken,</HI> or
<HI>Belocud.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Locked,</HI> or fast-shut.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beudun.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>Bands.</ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beheht,</HI> or
<HI>Beheght,</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>Promise.</HI></ITEM>
<LABEL>
<HI>Beom.</HI></LABEL>
<ITEM>
<HI>A tree,</HI> we use the name now for the tree, when, it is squared out, calling it
<HI>a Beame of timber,</HI> whereby is meant a tree for building, for timbring in our old
<HI>English,</HI> is building.</ITEM></LIST>
</DIV2>
</DIV1>
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</TEXT>
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<!-- Transcribed from The Englishe Scholemaister (1596), p. 209 -->
<!-- Possibly an overly elaborate rendition of a fairly simple word list. -->