It is used to describe the pre-civil war era, and most historians say it goes back to around 1820 or so, but that is in dispute.
If you mean "bell" as in bellicose, or belligerent, it comes from the Latin "bellum", which means "war". Ante-bellum means pre-war, or before the war.
Are you going to ante up or sit this hand out, Dallas? That ups the ante considerably. I don't ante up with anyone that uses a city as their first name.
Welcome ante Telugu lo "స్వాగతం" అని అర్థం.
The prefix 'ante-' means before. It comes from the Latin word 'ante', which means before. An example of this is the word anteroom, which is a smaller room that comes before a larger room.
The prefix "ante-" comes from Latin, meaning "before."
Ante = before bellum = the accusative case of the noun meaning the war So: before the war
The answer is ante bellum.
ante-bellum
Ante bellum - before the war
Treaty of Ghent Status quo ante bellum
Antebellum. Ante means before and bellum means war.
"Ante bellum" means "before the war", the war in question being the Civil War.
In the ante-bellum South, slave labor was the basis for the agricultural economy, and it made plantation owners very rich.
The phrase meaning before the Civil War is ante bellum.
Status quo ante bellum - The state in which things were before the war. The U.K. failed to conquer the United States, and the United States failed to conquer Canada.
AM means Ante Meridiem in text. Period between Midnight and Noon Called Ante Meridiem in text.
If you mean "bell" as in bellicose, or belligerent, it comes from the Latin "bellum", which means "war". Ante-bellum means pre-war, or before the war.