means to or towards when followed by the accusative case
When both letters are capitalized, it's an abbreviation for Anno Domini, "In the Year of the Lord".
BC: Before Christ AD: Anno Domini (After Christ/Latin) BC stands for "Before Christ", AD stands for "Anno Domini" which is medieval latin for "in the year of (the) Lord" - not After Death! Interestingly, there was no year zero - the calendar goes straight from 1 BC to 1 AD.
In Latin, it should mean "to the summit".
The Canadian national motto, "A Mari Usque Ad Marie" is in Latin. It means "From Sea to Sea."
Anno Domini, a Latin term meaning years after the birth of Jesus Christ. A literal translation would be the years of our master.
It is known as the Pax Romana(latin for Roman Peace).
Latin for "to the matter" is ad rem
Yes, "Ad nauseum" comes from the Latin language.
Veni ad me Is Latin for: come to me
AD stands for Anno Domini which is Medieval Latin for 'In the year of (the/Our) Lord'
plus
Ad and parere are the Latin roots of 'apparition'. The preposition 'ad' is the Latin equivalent of 'to, toward'. The infinitive 'parere' is the Latin equivalent of 'to come into view'.
What is appropriate?from Late Latin appropriātus, past participle of appropriāre, to make one's own : Latin ad-, ad- + Latin proprius, own.http://www.answers.com/appropriate
ad lib is a latin abbreviation for 'freely'
"Ad loco."
ad te
Ad
ad villam