No.
BCE (or just BC) comes before CE (also known as AD).
Theyre the same thing....Are you sure your old enough to use the Internet?
it means the dates of the past like bc is the same as bce which id the decrease of dates like 524bce to 520bce is 2 years but ad is the opposite
You could describe the eighteenth century both ways. If you were speaking of, say, an event in ancient Egypt, you would say 1776 BC. If you were speaking of something such as the American Revolution, you would say 1776 AD. BC is the same as BCE and AD is the same as CE.
CE stands for common era. It is, in simple terms, the same as AD. In following with this, there is BCE, or before common era, which is the same as BC.
BCE.
Please note that AD and CE are the same year systems - the opposite of AD is BC, or BCE (Before Christ, Before the Common Era). Marcus Aurelius was born in 126 AD and passed away in 180 AD.
It was 1939-1945 AD.
CE is Common Era, it's the same thing as AD (Anno Domini) BCE is also used instead of BC We are in the year 2009 AD and 2009 CE.
It is the 6th century.
BC and BCE are two different ways of expressing the same general era. So the two would be 165 years apart. If it was between 565 BC or BCE and 400 AD then it would be 965 years.
"AD" stands for "Anno Domini," a Latin term meaning "in the year of our Lord," used to denote years after the birth of Jesus Christ. "BC" stands for "Before Christ," indicating years before this event. "BCE," or "Before Common Era," is a secular alternative to BC, used in the same way to denote years before the start of the Common Era (CE), which corresponds to AD. The CE/BCE system is often preferred in academic contexts for its neutrality.