There is no such acronym in French.
"50 BC" would for instance be translated as "50 av. J.-C." (short for "avant Jesus-Christ", before Christ)
Some people also use negative years, such as "-50", but that's very rare and not the standard usage.
well Quebec is mostly bilingual with many people who speak French. other territories do speak partially in French as well as in English. I live in BC and speak both.
The 10th century BC started the first day of 1000 BC and ended the last day of 901 BC.
avant JC
10,000 BC
BC = Before Christ AD = Anno Domini (after the birth of Christ)
The first Monday of August
because he could not speak english so he could not talk
bc she was
English is the majority language.
English
in French BC is written "avant Jésus-Christ", abbreviated "av. JC" Jules César est mort en 44 av. JC = Julius Caesar died in 44 BC
There is no record of his day of birth. He lived from 384 BC to 322 BC.