Anno Domini and Ante Christum are Latin equivalents of the English abbreviations "A.D." and "B.C." The two prepositional phrases respectively translate literally as "Year of Our Lord," which is sometimes abbreviated in English as "C.E." for "Common Era" or "Current Era," and "Before Christ" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "AN-no DO-mee-nee" and "AN-tey KREE-stoom" in Church and classical Latin.
denoting motion or direction to
AD stands for Anno Domini which is Medieval Latin for 'In the year of (the/Our) Lord'
in Latin, "my" or "mine"
A satirical rendition of an ad.
Ad nauseam.
In Latin, it should mean "to the summit".
In Latin it is Anno Domini or AD
It's Latin for the walk was.
To observe, to watch, to look at.
With God to the end.
'to the finger nail'
The Latin phrase ad pulchra means literally "for beauty".