dyde adowne, III, 67, 226: put down.
dye, IV, 260, 16: dey, dairy-woman. See day.
dyght, III, 72, 320, dedes that here be dyght: prepared, concerted.
dyght (to the deth), III, 309, 40: done, brought.
dyghtande, III, 75, 388: making ready (but seems to be intended for a past participle).
dyke==wall, IV, 295, E 6; 296, F 6. castle-dyke, II, 410, 4. garden-dyke, II, 370, 5; 371, 5. fail dyke, I, 253, 2: turf wall. hollan dyke, II, 195, 32; nettle-dyke, II, 463, 22: wall on which hollies, nettles, are growing.
dyke, III, 441, 36: ditch.
dyne, garre me ones to dyne, III, 296, 24: give me my dinner, my fill, beat thoroughly. (Able to give the greatest prince in Christendome a mortall breakfast, if he had been the king’s enemie. Holinshed’s Chronicle, III, 512, ed. 1807-8. G. L. Kittredge.)
dynt(e), dint, III, 309, 42, 45, 46: stroke, hit, lunge, shot (of spear, arrow). See dunts.
dypper, V, [283], 5, 15: deeper.