Anno Domini is in the year of our Lord. I don't think that B.C. is in Latin. It means before Christ. Before Christ in Latin, is Ante Christus, which is NOT B.C.
English is a very recent langauge: it developed its modern form gradually between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries (middle English to early modern English period). Latin reached its classical form (the form which is considered the 'purest') sometime in the second century BC, but was already a written language in the sixth century BC. So English is about six hundred years old, or maybe a little less; Latin is about two thousand three hundred years old, or maybe a little more.
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
It was invented in 457 BC.
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
Latin
I think BC means 'Before Christ' in English so therefore it means Ante Christo.
BC: Before Christ AD: Anno Domini (After Christ/Latin) BC stands for "Before Christ", AD stands for "Anno Domini" which is medieval latin for "in the year of (the) Lord" - not After Death! Interestingly, there was no year zero - the calendar goes straight from 1 BC to 1 AD.
BC = Before Christ. AD = Anno Domini (latin) the year of Christ's birth.
It began in 240 BC when a Roman audience saw a Latin version of a Greek play. The play was adapted by Livius Andronicus, who earlier had been a prisoner of war in 272 BC
86 BC is the first century BC (Before Christ). BC is a designation used to label or number years in the Julian and Gregorian calendars that precede the year 1 AD (Anno Domini which is Latin for "in the year of the Lord").The centuries in relation to 86 BC are as follows: 7th century BC 6th century BC 5th century BC 4th century BC 3rd century BC 2nd century BC 1st century BC (86 BC)
BC are simply two letters of the alphabet with no intrinsic meaning of their own.As a common abbreviation BC stands for "Before Christ" or "British Columbia" in English and is not (as far as I am aware) used as an abbreviation in any other language.So whether you want it in English or not, it is an English term.Perhaps you are confused by the opposite of "Before Christ" - the Latin term Anno Domini (AD), meaning "in the year of the Lord". That is a Latin phrase, but BC is not.
The Latin people were important in the times of ancient Rome because the Romans were (and still are) Latins.