Category
page 1Languages attested from the 14th century
Maithili
Indo-Aryan language spoken in India and Nepal
Middle French
historical variety of French used c. 1350–1600

Neo-Latin
Neo-Latin (also known as New Latin and Modern Latin) is the style of written Latin used in original literary, scholarly, and scientific works, first in Italy during the Italian Renaissance of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and then across northern Europe after about 1500, as a key feature of the humanist movement. Through comparison with Latin of the Classical period, scholars from Petrarch onwards promoted a standard of Latin closer to that of the ancient Romans, especially in grammar, style, and spelling. The term Neo-Latin was however coined much later, probably in Germany in the l
renaissance Latin
Latin as spoken and written in the Renaissance
Middle Norwegian
North Germanic language spoken in Norway 1350–1550 before being superseded by Dano-Norwegian

Bolognese
version of Emilian-Romagnol spoken in Bologna

Manipravalam
thumb|Manipravalam used to write Malayalam
Manipravalam (, ) is a macaronic language found in some manuscripts of South India. It is a hybrid language, typically written in the Grantha script, which combines Sanskrit lexicon and Tamil morpho-syntax. According to language scholars Giovanni Ciotti and Marco Franceschini, the blending of Tamil and Sanskrit is evidenced in manuscripts and their colophons over a long period of time, and this ultimately may have contributed to the emergence of Manipravalam. However, the 14th century Sanskrit work Lilatilakam states that Manipravalam is a combination
Mandarin
common spoken language of administration of the Chinese empire during the Ming and Qing dynasties, later developing into Standard Chinese
Old Sundanese
earliest recorded stage of the Sundanese language
Middle Khmer
historical stage of the Khmer language as it existed between the 14th and 18th centuries, spanning the period between Old Khmer and the modern language