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attame, to commence. Caxton, Hist. Troye, leaf 19, 12; lf. 71, back, 28. OF. atamer; L. attaminare, to lay hands on. Cp. O. Prov. entamenar. ‘entamer’ (Levy). See Hatzfeld (s.v. Entamer).
atte, for at the; atte last, at the last; atte castel, at the castle; Morte Arthur (see Glossary); atten ale (at nale), at the ale-house; Skelton, Bowge of Courte, 387. ME. atte, at the (Chaucer); atte nale, at the ale-house (P. Plowman, c. viii. 19).
attend, attendance. Greene, A Looking-glass, i. 1. 8.
attent, attentive, attentively. Milton, P. R. i. 385; Dryden, Wife of Bath, 310.
attentate, a criminal attempt or assault. Bacon, Henry VII, ed. Lumby, p. 86. F. attentat, ‘tentative criminelle’ (Hatzfeld).
atteynt, an ‘attaint’, a wound on a horse’s foot due to a blow or injury; either from overstepping, or from being trodden on by another horse. Fitzherbert, Husbandry, § 113; Topsell, Four-footed Beasts, 313 (NED.).
attonce, at once. Peele, Arr. of Paris, iii. 2 (Paris); iv. 1 (Paris).
attract, an attractive quality, charm. ‘The Soule ... glides after these attracts’, Manchester Al Mondo (ed. 1639, p. 117). Late L. attractus, attraction.