There really isn't one since there were no clerks in this time. People grew and sold what they grew or made. The items went to the manor or local market.
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There were clerks in the Medieval period. They did much the same job as today, checked material costs, wages, and kept accounts usually for nobility. For proof of this look no further than Chaucer's "Clerk's Tale" from the Canterbury Tales.
Clerk was the common word used although I've seen the name clark used.
A scribe or clerk; someone who recorded things and wrote things down
WEEPERS
yes if you are talking about Medieval Europe or something but not if it's like "that dress is so medieval"
Dark Ages
There were no short stories, there were no books like we know today, there were no newspapers. The stories that were around were told orally from one person to another. The printing press hadn't been invented and people couldn't read.
old, gothic
cash handler
Gothic
Early Gothic is another word for Medieval Art.
Clerk
The word "clerk" has one syllable.
In Beowulf, a medieval student would be referred to as a scōlere, which is the Old English term for scholar or student.
Serf is another word for slave so they were owned by the nobility.
A scribe or clerk; someone who recorded things and wrote things down
writer, or sometimes considered an artisan.
What is the plural word for clerks
There is only one syllable in "clerk".