mediaeval in English

adjective
1
of or relating to the Middle Ages.
a medieval castle
synonyms:of the Middle Agesof the Dark AgesDark-AgeGothic

Use "mediaeval" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "mediaeval" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "mediaeval", or refer to the context using the word "mediaeval" in the English Dictionary.

1. 3 Mediaeval Alchemy contained Gnostic elements.

2. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceō (“please”).

3. 15 Chaucer wrote in the late mediaeval period.

4. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceo ("please")

5. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceo (“please").

6. 15 It eschewed the Gothic spire and mediaeval internal arrangements.

7. 9 It eschewed the Gothic spire and mediaeval internal arrangements.

8. Assisi needs to put more rails in keeping with the mediaeval

9. Inside Estudios de latín medieval hispánico (Acts of the V Congress of Mediaeval Hispanic Latin.

10. The mediaeval overtones of Bruges’ cobblestone streets lead to countless historical, architectural and artistic wonders

11. The priory was a Benedictine foundation of 1075, and parts of the mediaeval buildings remain.

12. These Barbaric codes of Roman law mark the passage of Roman law into incipiently mediaeval stages.

13. Ecclesia [mediaeval Latin, and Greek - from : SUMMONED]-A regularly Convoked assembly, especially the general assembly of Athenians

14. Beguines were women who defied the organisation of women in the early mediaeval period as either nun or wife

15. A HISTORY OF MEDIAEVAL JEWISH PHILOSOPHY ISAAC HUSIK And there is no growth or diminution without Antecedent genesis and decay

16. 29 This is an area of spectacular gorges and jagged cliffs, beautiful unspoilt villages, with historic castles and mediaeval houses.

17. Finally we turned back past Haddon Hall(Sentencedict.com), a magnificent mediaeval country house and reputedly the finest of its kind in Britain.

18. LIFE ON A MEDIAEVAL BARONY WILLIAM STEARNS DAVIS Poor mother, some great ignorant, Clodhopping wench who will frighten her into a nervous fit

19. 16 The mediaeval church was divided on the issue of whether there was impropriety in the mimetic representation of holy personages on stage.

20. The word derives from French Commanderie or commenderie, from mediaeval Latin commendaria or commenda, meaning "a trust or charge", originally one held in commendam.

21. The name of the company was a composite of "Deutsche Luft" ("German Air" in German), and "Hansa" (after the Hanseatic League, a powerful mediaeval trading group).

22. The surname Bauld was first found in Prussia, where the name Bauld emerged in mediaeval times as one of the notable families of the region

23. A HISTORY OF MEDIAEVAL JEWISH PHILOSOPHY ISAAC HUSIK We mean rather a more stringent Abstemiousness, which may be called separation from the world, or asceticism. A HISTORY OF …

24. The surname Brandis was first found in Prussia, where the name Brandis was closely identified in early mediaeval times with the feudal society of early European history

25. Avignon charms visitors with its ancient streets, restored mediaeval ramparts and the immense Gothic architecture of the Palais des Papes (Palace of Popes—the papacy was based here in the 14th century)

26. Brut y Brenhinedd (Chronicle of the Kings), a Welsh mediaeval chronicle The Prose Brut, or Brut Chronicle, a chronicle of England in Anglo-Norman, Latin, and English, whose earliest versions date from the late 13th century

27. Armorial of Jersey : being an account, heraldic and antiquarian, of its chief native families, with pedigrees, biographical notices, and illustrative data; to which are added a brief history of heraldry, and remarks on the mediaeval antiquities of the island

28. Budge of court, free food and drink in a royal court; BudgeBudge, a city in the state of West Bengal, India; Budge Hall, a building at Brigham Young University; Budge, a mediaeval term for lamb's skin fur clothing or trimming with the wool showing outwards; People:

29. ‘As in many Renaissance Antiphonaries, the prominence of the large historiated initial T and the profuse border decoration have reduced the text to a few verses.’ ‘In 1980 Daniel Wildenstein enriched the museum with his father's extraordinary collection of illuminations: 228 mediaeval miniatures taken from Antiphonaries, missals and books

30. A Bezant was a coin, made of gold or silver, minted in the Byzantine Empire and used for currency throughout mediaeval Europe; nowadays the term is seldom used apart from heraldry, in which it is used to refer to a representation of a gold coin (a roundel of a gold colour).

31. ‘The Cornetto, for example, which is an instrument that pretty much died out after this period was considered the instrument closest to the human voice, and it makes a very vocal sound.’ ‘Jo Wherry, on violin and treble viol, played an excellent descant solo, and Jonathan Burr, who is able to produce music on the difficult mediaeval

32. A kind of Cruet is recorded among early French table silver, "a double necked bottle in divisions, in which to place two kinds of liquor without mixing them." Arts and Crafts in the Middle Ages A Description of Mediaeval Workmanship in Several of the Departments of Applied Art, Together with Some Account of Special Artisans in the Early Renaissance