The words are Latin in origin and in English, "Anno" means "year" and "Domini" means "Lord".
Thus "Anno Domini" means "the year of the Lord"
The "Lord" being referred to in the statement is "The Lord" as in Jesus Christ.
The term is therefore used to denote the timeline after Jesus' birth...year ZERO if u want....everything before that is B.C (before Christ) and everything after that is AD (Anno Domini).
Anno Domini Anno Domini
No, Anno Domini is Latin. It means "in the Year of the Lord."
Latin for “in the year of our lord,” is anno domini"A.D."
The term Anno Domini is Medieval Latin, translated as In the year of (the/Our) Lord.
It's Latin for "in the year [anno] of the Lord [Domini]".
Anno
Anno Domini High Definition was created on 2009-06-15.
The words are Latin in origin and in English, "Anno" means "year" and "Domini" means "Lord".Thus "Anno Domini" means "the year of the Lord"The "Lord" being referred to in the statement is "The Lord" as in Jesus Christ.The term is therefore used to denote the timeline after Jesus' birth...year ZERO if u want....everything before that is B.C (before Christ) and everything after that is AD (Anno Domini).
Anno Domini (AD) which means in the year of the Lord.
anno domini is pronounced as an-imo-domoni the word is Latin and stands for the term AD most people consider this to say after death but the meaning was named after a philosopher.
What used to be called Anno Domini is nowadays called the Common Era, in order to avoid the specifically Christian association of Anno Domini. They are the same thing.
AD stands for the Latin Anno Domini or 'in the year of our lord'.