Aspye, [249], espy.
Astat, [12], estate.
Asyse, [60], assize. Hence, judgment; as in a passage quoted by Stevenson from an Edinburgh MS. in the additions to Boucher.
At, that.
Atent, [4], intention.
Atreyd, [350], frightened. This may be a mistake for “afreyd.” I find the same word, however, in The Kyng of Tars, 604—
“He sturte him up in a breyd,
In his herte sore atrayyed.”
In which place it probably means vexed, angered, as in The Seven Sages, 1867, from “tray.” Ritson absurdly explains it poison’d, from the Saxon attred.
Atwin, in two, asunder.