It depends entirely on what country you're talking about. For example, In Vietnam in the mid 17th Century, they spoke Vietnamese and various Chinese dialects.
In the mid-17th century, languages such as English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Dutch, and Latin were widely spoken in various regions, colonies, and empires around the world. These languages were dominant due to colonial expansion and trade networks during that period.
The English language developed from a variety of dialects spoken by Germanic tribes who migrated to England around the 5th century. Old English, the earliest form of the language, was spoken in what is now England and southern Scotland.
The word "criteria" comes from the Greek word "kriterion," meaning a standard or rule for judgment. It entered the English language in the mid-17th century through Latin and French influences.
Interlingua is an artificial language based on English and Romance languages. It was developed in the mid-20th century with the goal of being easily understood by speakers of those languages.
Latin stopped being spoken as a native language around the 5th century AD in the Western Roman Empire, but it continued to be used as a written and scholarly language for many centuries thereafter. It evolved into the Romance languages spoken today, such as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese.
English and German are both Germanic languagesThe Germanic languages are a group of related languages that constitute a branch of the Indo-European language family. The common ancestor of all the languages in this branch is Proto-Germanic, which was spoken around the mid-1st millennium BC in Iron Age northern Europe.English and German are the most widely spoken Germanic languages, with approximately 309-400 million and over 100 million native speakers respectively.Along with other Indo-European languages, English and German ultimately evolved from the Proto-Indo-European languagewhich is the unattested, reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European languages, spoken by the Proto-Indo-Europeans.
Around the mid 17th century.
Manchus
English was spoken first in Britain in the mid-15th century.
The movement began in mid-17th century England.
No. Dodos went extinct in the mid to late 17th century.
Mid 17th century: Japanese, from ki 'wearing' + mono 'thing.'
The cell theory was published during the mid-17th century.
Puritanism was a religious movement that emerged in England in the late 16th century and continued into the 17th century. The height of Puritan influence was during the mid-17th century, particularly in England and its North American colonies.
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They were eaten by the Dutch in the mid 17th century, so basically, I would say EATING.
By George Fox and others agreeing an organisational structure from the mid 17th century onwards.
It means 'mean and ungenerous' from mid 17th century English