Latin phrase 'ab initio' means?
Answer added:
It means "He (she or it) has done ( or made ) since the beginning."
The beginning. The Latin phrase "ab initio" means "from the beginning".
Ab initio = from the beginning
I believe that you are thinking of the Latin phrase, ab initio, which means from the beginning.
Ab initioab means from and initio is the ablative case (required by the preposition) of initium which means beginningAb initio = from the beginninga principio
The Latin phrase for "Back to the beginning" is ab initio
"Ab initio" is Latin and means "from the beginning".
One of two Latin phrases may be chosen as equivalent to the English phrase 'from the beginning'. One option is the phrase ab initio, which is in the ablative case. The nominative, or subject, form of the word in the singular is 'initium', which means 'an entering upon' and, therefore, a beginning. Another option is ab ovo, which literally means 'from the egg'.
ab initio
The Latin words of ab initio translates into English as the word from. In Spanish these words are desde and in Italian it is da.
It is Latin and it means: from the beginning. It is used in the context of literature, law and science.
Ab initio, amor erat
The Agreement was void "Ab Initio".