332 
** Haulm, straw left in an esh or 
gratten ; stubble, thatch. Sax. 
heelme, cudmus, calamus. Icel. hal- 
mur, falea.”—Bish. Kennett’s MS. 
Ray gives ‘‘ haulm or helm, stubble 
gathered after the corn is inned.” 
Hazard, 23/11, s. danger. 
Heale, 19/37, v. to recover, be cured. 
Healthsom, 11/8, aaj. healthy, invigo- 
rating. 
*Heare, 41, s. hair. 
Hearesaie, 2/10, s. hearsay, report. 
Hearie, 49/7, adj. hairy, full of hairs. 
A.S. hér. O. Icel. 2dr, hair. 
Heate, 76/2, 4. heated, hot. 
Heawers, 47/8, s. A/. woodcutters. A.S. 
heawan, to cut. 
Hed, 89/9, s. head, mind. 
Hedlonds, 52/17, s. p/. headlands. 
Hew, 112/1, s. colour, ‘‘ changed hew” 
=have changed, become unfavour- 
able. 
Hew prowler, 35/25. ‘‘ Hugh Prowler 
is our Author’s name for a night- 
walker.” —T.R. 
Hid, 2/11, s. care, heed. A.S. hédan. 
Hier, 23/9, s. business, duty. 
Hight, 113/3, v. pt. ¢. was called, named. 
O. Eng. higt, higte. A.S. hatte 
from hafan, to call, name. 
Hilback, 10/40, s. cover back, ze. 
clothes, extravagance in dress. 
Kennett, MS. Lansdowne 1033.— 
Halliwell. A.S.A2/an, helan, to cover. 
Hindring, 88/3, v. injuring, damaging. 
Hir, 385/51, poss. pr. their. A.S. heor. 
Hobbard de Hoy, 60/3, s. a lad ap- 
proaching manhood. ‘‘ Hober-de- 
hoy, half a man and half a boy.”— 
Ray’s Gloss. 
Hogscote, 17/21, s. a pen or sty for hogs. 
Holds, 33/40, v. Zr. ¢. equals, gains 
equal. 
Holiokes, 43/15, s. 
A.S. holihoc. 
Homelie, 1/2, adj. plain, homely, un- 
pl. hollyhocks. 
pretending. 
Hone, 46/9, s. ‘‘a common rubber or 
whetstone.” —T.R. 
Honie, 106/4, adj. sweet. 
Horehound, 45/11, s. horehound. A.S. 
hara-hune, or possibly a corruption 
of Lat. wrinaria, the plant being 
considered a sovereign remedy in 
cases of strangury and dysuria. 
Horselock, 17/21, s. shackles for horses’ 
feet. 
Glossary. 
Horseteeme, 17/10, s. team of horses. 
Hostis, 10/8, s. p/. entertainers. 
Householdry, 9/11, s. furniture and 
articles for domestic use. 
Houell, 52/8, s. barn, outhouse. 
Houen, 49/4, Af. swelled. A.S. hebban, 
hefan (pp. hofen), to heave, raise. 
O. H. Ger. hevan. 
Hower, 107/4, s. hour. 
Howse, 57/31, v. imp. house. 
Hoy, 57/13, v. imp. drag, frighten, 
drive away by crying, ‘‘ hoy, hoy!”’ 
Hull, 36/23, s. holly. 
Huluer, 48/10, s. holly. O. Icel. hudlfr. 
Hurtilberies, 34/83, s. f/. the hurtle- 
berry or whortleberry, bilberry. 
Hutch, 10/47, s. money chest or box. 
A.S. hwecca=chest, an unautho- 
rised (?invented) form, due to 
Somner. O. Fr. howche. 
I. 
*Tayle, 88, s. a gaol, prison. 
Ictus sapit, 2/8. Lat. Prov. See Notes. 
Indian eie, 43/16, s. the Pink, so called 
from the eye-shaped marking of 
the corolla. 
Inholder, 97/1, s. innkeeper. 
Inned, 23/19, Af. saved, housed. 
Intreating, 88/5, s. treatment. 
Invest, 11/8, v. surround, 
Ise, 111/2, s. ice. 
Isop, 42/9, s. hyssop. A name assigned 
in the Authorised Version of the 
Bible to the caper. 
Ist, 5/3, is it. 
‘Iuie, 50/6, *Iuye, 42, s. ivy. A.S. dig. 
Ife 
Jack, 17/20, s. a horse or wooden frame 
upon which wood is sawn. 
Jack, 85/10, s. a drinking vessel con- 
taining half a pint according to 
Grose, and quarter of a pint accord- 
ing to Pegge, and Peacock’s Gloss. 
of Manley and Corringham. 
Jade, 17/3, s. an ill-tempered horse. 
Janting, 87/3, v. driving. Cotgrave 
gives another form of the word in 
English. ‘‘Zancer un cheval. To 
stirre a horse in the stable till hee 
sweat withall ; or (as our) to iaunt ; 
an old word.” ‘‘ Jaunt” is found 
in Romeo and Juliet, ii. 5, 26, 
