pryce, III, 63, 137: prize.

prycke, n. See pricke.

prycked, as faste as he myght ronne, III, 296, 21: sped; and so V, [80], 42. See prekyd.

pryckynge, III, 67, 229: spurring, riding briskly, should probably be rakynge; the yeomen are on foot. Cf. III, 123, 12; 180, 9, 11.

pryke, n. See pricke.

pryme, prime, III, 23, 9; 25, 72: the first canonical hour, first hour of the day.

pryse, I, 327, 16, 17: value, most(e) of pryse==most richly.

pu, pow, pull.

pudding-pricks, III, 160, 19: wooden skewers to fasten the end of a gut containing a pudding.

puggish, II, 427, 6: in a later copy, ragged. Mr Ebsworth suggests the meaning, tramper’s. (puggard, thief; pugging, thieving.)