There were many different languages in the middle ages, each with its own word for boat.
Midevil isn't a language. If you are referring to Middle English it is yes or yis.
In Middle English it was Ȝou or Yow. However each language has their own version.
No, there is a medieval language in the options. However, there is 'Pirate Speak' which sort of sounds medieval.
Yes, the peasants in medieval England spoke the English language.
The liturgical language used by the medieval Christian church was Latin.
In medieval Europe, a vernacular language was any language used by the common people that was not Latin.
Louis Goossens has written: 'Say, a case of perspectivization on the scene of linguistic action' -- subject(s): English language, Say (The English word), Semantics 'The old English glosses of ms. Brussels, Royal Library, 1650 (Aldhelm's De laudibus virginitatis)' -- subject(s): English language, Glossaries, vocabularies, Latin language, Medieval and modern, Medieval and modern Latin language
It is from Medieval Latin.
During the medieval era in Europe, Latin was the language of philosophy. Other places used different languages.
Charles Henry Beeson has written: 'A primer of medieval Latin' -- subject(s): Latin language, Medieval and modern, Latin literature, Medieval and modern, Medieval and modern Latin language, Medieval and modern Latin literature, Readers
The common language for medieval French was known as Old French. It evolved from Latin and was spoken from the 9th to the 14th century. Old French was the main language of literature and legal documents during that time period.
The official language of Scotland is English. Therefore boat still remains boat.