In 1523 Richard Bankes printed a curious little tract with the following title: 'Here begynneth a lytell newe treatyse or mater intytuled and called The IX.
Here beginneth a Lytell treatyse for to lerne Englisshe and Frensshe.
The author of the Treatyse of a galaunt bemoans the fact that "Englysshe men sholde be so blynde" as to adopt the "marde gere" of the French.
Colophon: Here endeth a lytyll treatyse for to lerne Englysshe and Frensshe.
In "An approved treatyse of Hawks and Hawking," by Edmund Bert, Gent.
The second (with the colophon 'Here endeth a lytyll treatyse called the booke of Curtesye or lytyll John.
Here endyth A lytyll[e] treatyse called the boke of curtesy or litill[e] Iohan.
Here folowyth the order made to all those whiche shall haue the vnderstondynge of this forsayd treatyse & vse it for theyr pleasures.
Go lytell treatyse deuoyde of eloquence Tremblynge for dreade to approche the maieste Of our souereynge lord surmountynge in excellence Put under the wynge of his benygnyte Submyttynge the to his mercyfull pytie.
Faythful and moste Godly Treatyse Concernynge the Most Sacred Sacrament of the Blessed Body and Bloude of Our Saviour Christ.
And at the end:-- "Here endeth a shorte treatyse called Margerie kempe de Lynn.
She has come down to us only in a tiny quarto of eight pages printed by Wynkyn de Worde:-- "Here begynneth a shorte treatyse of contemplacyon taught by our lorde Jhesu cryste, or taken out of the boke of Margerie kempe of Lynn.
This was published in 1883 by Mr. Thomas Satchell under the title An Older Form of the Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Angle.
Next in date comes the famousTreatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Angle, printed at Westminster by Wynkyn de Worde in 1496 as a part of the second edition of The Book of St. Albans.
And though ma- ny thynges be left out of thistreatyse that ought to be spoken of / yet I suppose that this shall be sufficyent for an introduction [F.
Still rarer than this is one of the treatises in a separate form, and printed in the next century:-- Juliana Barnes's Treatyse of Fysshynge with an Angle.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "treatyse" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.