It means "They have sailed to the free America" in latin. "Amearicam" isn't a latin word, so I'm assuming it means America.
Are you sure that the word is NAVIGATIERUNT? There is a Latin word NAVIGAVERUNT. In English - "they sailed". (The word "they" may not be necessary in an English translation if the Latin sentence is something like "Nautae navigaverunt" (The sailors sailed), or "Naves navigaverunt" (The ships sailed).)
they sailed they have sailed they did sail
AD plus AD in hexidecimal = 15A
The possessive form for the noun ad is ad's; the ad's results.
A Pepsi ad is a Pepsi ad...?
Ad :)
110 AD
Maymuna bint al-Harith(m. 630 AD-632 AD) Maria al-Qibtiyya(m. 630 AD-632 AD) Umm Salama Hind bint Abi Umayya(m. 629 AD-632 AD) Safiyya bint Huyayy(m. 629 AD-632 AD) Rayhāna bint Zayd ibn ʿAmr(m. 629 AD-631 AD) Ramla bint Abi Sufyan(m. 628 AD-632 AD) Juwayriyya bint al-Harith(m. 628 AD-632 AD) Zaynab bint Jahsh(m. 627 AD-632 AD) Zaynab bint Khuzayma(m. 625 AD-627 AD) Hafsa bint Umar(m. 624 AD-632 AD) Sawda bint Zamʿa(m. 619 AD-632 AD) Aisha bint Abu Bakr(m. 619 AD-632 AD) Khadija bint Khuwaylid(m. 595 AD-619 AD)
201 AD comes before 1530 AD.
AD 27 came first.
Ad hoc is pronounced as "ad hock".
Ad hoc.