Fare thee well
well armed french people
One! Medieval cruck houses were made of one room, which the working took place in..... well, most happened outside!
well that name is pretty funny but i have no idea, sorry
Doves. Yet they have several proposes. They were eaten and the dung was used as well. I just saw a program on Wales and they visited a medieval castle with a built in place for doves to nest.
There is no difference, well, if you know what I mean. You a male a soldier and you call a female a soldier.
A soldier is part of the armed forces. the armed forces are, well, you know, a giant "constellation". A militia man, however, is just part of a "neighborhood army". Militias were used in the Revolutionary War to fight against the Lobster, Redcoats, British, however you want to say it. Militia men were also called "Minutemen", because they were ready to fight "In a minute of preparation."
Well, depending on exact function... you're probably thinking of a "mercenary", or a "security contractor". In some armed forces, there are irregular "auxiliaries".
A man during the Renaissance who was well read, could recite poetry, knew the classics and was a good soldier would likely be called a Renaissance man or a polymath.
well army is a collective noun but you could have an army of people or an army of soldiers. Peace I'm out
A Roman soldier was called a "miles".---------------------------------------Roman soldiers were generically called "a legionary" (Latin = legionarius) or "legionaries"
The words ONE MAN ARMY refer to a specialist, well-trained heavily armed soldier who is dropped behind enemy lines.Often working entirely on their own with a specific target to destroy.
Alexander was king of Macedonia as well as a great soldier who technically did not loose a war.
A soldier? Well, she was around 17. brave she was....
Are you talking about Orff's Carmina Burana? If you are, I believe that poem is in Medieval Latin. Most of the poems in that collection are in Medieval Latin, and there is some mix of Germanic languages and Medieval French, as well.
Latin - in its later medieval form as well as Classical Latin.
Yes it was, as well as flails.