bce

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Definition

Adverb * Before the Common Era: Used to indicate a year or period that occurred before the year 1 in the Gregorian calendar. It is equivalent to "BC" (Before Christ) and is part of a secular dating system.

Usage
  • The abbreviation "BCE" is placed after a numerical year.
  • It is used in historical, academic, and scientific writing to provide a neutral, non-religious alternative to "BC."
  • "BCE" is always written in uppercase letters.
Examples
  • The city of Rome was founded, according to legend, in 753 BCE.
  • The philosopher Confucius lived from 551 BCE to 479 BCE.
  • This artifact dates from the 5th century BCE.
Advanced Usage
  • Dating Systems: "BCE" is part of the "Common Era" (CE) and "Before the Common Era" (BCE) dating system, which corresponds exactly to the Anno Domini (AD) and Before Christ (BC) system. The year 1 CE is the same as 1 AD, and 44 BCE is the same as 44 BC.
  • Zero Year: There is no year "0" in this system. The year 1 BCE is immediately followed by the year 1 CE.
Variants and Related Words
  • CE (Adverb): Common Era. Equivalent to "AD" (Anno Domini). Placed after a year number (e.g., 1066 CE).
  • BC (Adverb): Before Christ. The traditional, religiously-oriented equivalent to "BCE."
  • AD (Adverb): Anno Domini (Latin for "in the year of our Lord"). The traditional equivalent to "CE." Note: "AD" is typically placed before the year number (e.g., AD 1066), unlike "CE" which follows it.
Synonyms
  • BC (Before Christ): The direct synonym, though with a different etymological and cultural connotation.
Notes
  • The use of "BCE/CE" versus "BC/AD" is often a matter of personal, institutional, or editorial preference to use a secular term. The chronological scale is identical.
  • When writing centuries, the abbreviation follows the ordinal number: "the third century BCE," "the first century CE."
Adverb
  1. of the period before the Common Era; preferred by some writers who are not Christians
    • in 200 BCE

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