C.E.


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Adv.1.C.E. - of the period coinciding with the Christian era; preferred by some writers who are not Christians; "in 200 CE"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
When he appeared before the Dubai Court of First Instance, the 39-year-old Nigerian driver, C.E., denied prosecutors' accusation that he had raped the 24-year-old Cameroonian woman.
A 39-year-old Nigerian driver, C.E., earlier denied prosecutors' accusation that he had raped the 24-year-old Cameroonian woman when he appeared before the Dubai Court of First Instance.
Pupils from St Mary's C.E. Primary School and The Richard Crosse C.E.
Hammel New York LLC has announced that C.E. Sales Co.
James Charlesworth believes that the Prophets were not defined canonically until the second century C.E. With regard to the third section, "The Writings," both Sanders and Charlesworth part from the traditional date at Jamnia in 90 C.E.
But members of the SNTS Pseudepigrapha Seminar which met in 1977 in Tubingen and again in 1978 in Paris dated it from the first century C.E. Its absence from the fragments of 1 Enoch discovered at Qumran led J.
Paul's second letter to the church in Corinth is often understood to be a compilation of at least three and perhaps four distinct writings, spanning a two- to three-year period in the middle 50s C.E. and edited into one unit sometime in the first decades after the apostle's martyrdom and before his letters were widely circulated, approximately 75-80 C.E.
to the Roman destruction of the city in 70 C.E. The author traces the city's urban, demographic, topographical, and archaeological components, its political regimes, public institutions, socioreligious groupings, and cultural and religious frameworks.