Your question does not make sense. There is no difference between the two English phrases you've provided.
Anno domini literally means "in the year of THE lord."
"In The Year of Our Lord" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase Anno Domini.
Specifically, the masculine noun anno means "in the year." The masculine noun domini means "of (our) lord." The pronunciation will be "AHN-noh DOH-mee-nee" in the liturgical Latin of the Church.
'Anno Domini' means 'Year of the Lord'.
Latin for “in the year of our lord,” is anno domini"A.D."
No, Anno Domini is Latin. It means "in the Year of the Lord."
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 Domini (AD) which means in the year of the Lord.
Anno Domini.
In Latin it is Anno Domini or AD
Domini means "Lord" in Latin. As in, Anno Domini ("Year of our Lord") or, as used when conjugated, Dominus Vobiscum ("The Lord be with you").
Medieval Latin for anno Domini. Meaning in the year of the Lord.
A.D. stands for Anno Domini, "year of our lord" in latin. The d (domini) in English means lord.
AD stands for the Latin Anno Domini or 'in the year of our lord'.
Anno domini, meaning the year of Our Lord, is a phrase in Latin, thus coming from the Roman Empire.