Yes, "Ad nauseum" comes from the Latin language.
Well, darling, in the game "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" for Game Boy Color, you use the spell "Mucus ad Nauseam" by selecting it from your spell menu and aiming it at your enemies to make them sick and weaken them. It's a handy little spell to have up your sleeve when you're facing off against those pesky foes. Just remember, it's not all about flashy spells and wand-waving, sometimes a bit of gross-out magic can save the day.
It can be "the house" or "the back"
It means "to the sources"
Racked, snacked, hacked, jacked, cracked, lacked, lacked, fact, act, bract, tracked, ad nauseum. So many more.
I think it means 'The year of the/our Lord'.
We are preparing for life
It's two words: ad nauseum. And if you look at the word, you can probably figure out it has something to do with nausea, right? It means that something has been said or done to the point of being figuratively nauseating - in other words, it's been done past the point where anybody wants to see or hear it again.
Haha, one of lifes great wonders, there is no good answer, lay on it, if it falls asleep move it above your head repeat ad nauseum
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. -George Santayana Hence the reason that this question in all its permutations is asked ad nauseum.
'to the finger nail'
It means you are a character in a soap opera being penned by a hack writer, or else your family comes into your hospital room every days and talks to you ad nauseum about their hopes and dreams for you.