I assume you mean in the Middle Ages or Medieval or ( dark) ages, not an age bracket of say fifty-plus. The answer is yes, as the nuns sustained themselves economically in various forms of agriculture and gardening, and implements were needed to pracftice this art. Some of the gardens were small but productive. So they would have to use garden or farm tools such as hoes, plows, etc. Some may have raised livestock such as cattle- yes in a sense Dairy farm nuns- please do not say cowgirls. Some rustic nuns even rode horseback on these establishments in South America., a religious comic book called the Treasure Chest had an eye-cathing cover of the ( Cowgirl Nuns of South America) in one issue- relax, it is not a normal practice. ( levis habits, no go!)
They probably served in a iron bowl but didn't talk
Nuns lived in a nunnery.
The old stone age was characterized by not having tools. The middle stone was characterized by having invented tools. The new stone age was characterized by farming and having better tools.
everything
A nunnery
Yes, tools did become more complex during the Middle Stone Age. This period marked advancements in tool technology, such as the development of new techniques for making tools like microliths which were smaller and more refined than earlier stone tools. This complexity in tool-making suggests an increased sophistication in the skills and knowledge of the people of that time.
Microliths are small stone tools or weapons man made of different shapes at the middle ston age [mesolithic age]
From the early to middle neolithic (when copper tools were first made) to the present.
Sisters of Loreto at age 18.
They didn't read. The bible wasn't printed until 1443 and most people, including nuns, couldn't read.
all of the answers are correct
Any age became nuns. Some children that were left at the nunneries never left and became nuns. Often older women would become nuns because they were sent there by husbands or they were left alone and the nunneries were safe places.