Veel. 16. alibi. MS. Ed. 18. Veal.
Vessll. 29. a dish.
Vyne Grace. 61. a mess or dish. Grees is the wild Swine. Plott,
Hist. of Staff. p. 443. Gloss. to Douglas' Virgil, v. Grisis. and to
Chaucer. v. Grys. Thoroton, p. 258. Blount, Tenures. p. 101. Gresse.
Lel. Coll. IV. p. 243. Gres. 248. Both pork and wine enter into the
recipe.
Vyaunde Cypre. 97. from the Isle of Cyprus.
Vernage. 132. Vernaccia. a sort of Italian white-wine. In Pref. to Perlin, p. xix. mis-written Vervage. See Chaucer. It is a sweet wine in a MS. of Tho. Astle esq. p. 2.
Venyson. 135. often eaten with furmenty, E. of Devon's Feast, in brothe. Ibid.
Verde Sawse. 140. it sounds Green Sauce, but there is no sorel; sharp, sour Sauce. See Junius, v. Verjuice.
Vervayn. 172.
W.
Wele. 1. 28. old pronunciation of well, now vulgarly used in
Derbysh. wel, 3. alibi. wel smale, 6. very small. v. Lel. Coll.
IV. p. 218. 220. Hearne, in Spelm. Life of Ælfred. p. 96.