Common Era or CE is just the modern form of AD. In our everyday usage we don't need to use the CE as we are living in the common era, not BCE, or Before Common Era. The connotations CE and BCE are generally used by historians and school teachers to clarify dates. A sentence using CE could be "The Colosseum was dedicated in 80 Common Era (or 80 CE)."
Common sense should tell you that common sense is not a word, it is a phrase made from two words.
B.C.E (Before Common Era) C.E (Common Era)
It is called the "common" era by some people because it is commonly shared among all cultures of the world as the predominant year-numbering system, despite its Western/Eurocentric bias. For example, it is the year 1432 in the Islamic era, 5771 in the Hebrew era, 2555 in the Buddhist era, and 2011 in the Christian era. But the Christian era is the one that has come to be used all around the world, even in Islamic, Buddhist and Jewish circles, for civil convenience purposes. Therefore, in addition to being the Christian era, it is considered the "Common" era.
BCE = Before the Common Era or B.C.I now finally understand BC, BCE AD and CE but where does BP come in to play. Before present. Is that before 2013 or before 01?
You could use: "Visiting the holocaust museum was a great way to get a hands-on learning experience about the era." --if that's even what you were trying to ask... :]
Here is a sentence for you, i ! When writing was invented, a new era was created.
"How do you use Mesozoic era in a sentence." Is a sentence using the words.
That phrase is from another era.
Samurais disappeared by the end of the Meiji era.
i just used common defense in a sentence
The Neolithic era was marked by the development of agriculture and the use of stone tools.
No, Jewish people use B.C.E and C.E. B.C.E referrs to "before the common era" and C.E. referrs to the "common era".
trolllol
trolllol
The men in the Paleolithic era didn't have much technology.
The word 'era' is a noun; a word for a long and distinct period of history with a particular feature or characteristic.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example:The era of the typewriter has past. (subject of the sentence)This house is from the Elizabethan era. (object of the preposition 'from')
People use various sentence errors as mistakes. They use THE word without any use.