Yes. Like all languages, it changes, so it has changed a lot since 1490 AD.
late 1490's In 1498 AD.
Nothing but Antarctica was discovered, humans inhabited all but Antarctica.
1557 - 1490 = 67
Andrew Hall has written: 'The use of argument in English drama, 1490-1535'
1490 = 2 * 5 * 149
3011
1490 g = 1.49 kgTo convert from g to kg, divide by 1000.
Depending on the author and his purpose, generally, Old English or Anglo-Saxon (circa 450-1066 CE). Middle English (circa 1066-1450 AD). Early Modern English from about the time of Shakespeare, and Modern English...now!!!
1490.
They didn't - televisions had not been invented in 1490.
1490s
Old English is the ancestor language of modern English, also called Anglo-Saxon, spoken in Britain from about 400 AD to 1100 AD.