"Hadde" or any variety of spellings. At that point in time, spelling was not actually established as we know it today. Chaucer typically spelled things however he wanted to fit it into his poem, within reason. Some German conjugations were lingering, but not a great deal, at least in my experience (taking a class on Chaucer in which we are required to read the text aloud.)
The word Satan comes to modern English from Middle English, to Middle English from Old English, to Old English from Late Latin, to Late Latin from Greek, and to Greek from Hebrew: śāṭān = adversary.
Middle English meaning coarse garment.
The word knife is derived from several different languages, and was used before the 12th century. It is derived from Middle English, Old English, Old Norse and Middle Old German dialects.
English, occupational name for a gamekeeper employed in a medieval park from an agent derivative of middle English "parc"
Chapman is an English occupational name for a merchant or trader. In Middle English chap, meant 'barter', 'bargain'.
Middle English incorporates influences from French.
"Middle" in English is mezzo in Italian.
No. Middle English is two words.
middle
Middle English typically describes dialects of the English language dating back to the Middle Ages. The time period for this dialect was between the High and Late Middle Ages, thus giving it the name "Middle English".
The Canterbury Tales was written in Middle English by Geoffrey Chaucer in the late 14th century.
Plat was a Middle English variant for plot.
French
Middle English originated in England, around 1150 CE.
Geoffrey Chaucer wrote "The Canterbury Tales" in Middle English, which was the common spoken and written language in England during the late 14th century. Middle English is distinct from older forms of the language like Old English and from the modern form of English that we use today.
Index of Middle English Verse was created in 1943.
The compound noun is Middle English.