rdfs:comment
| - From [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Ab initio]] ab (“‘from’”) + initiō, ablative singular of initium (“‘beginning’”).
- c.1600, from L., lit. "from the beginning", from ablative case of initium "entrance, beginning", related to verb inire "to go into, enter upon, begin".
- Ab initio is a Latin phrase used in English which, translated, means From the begging This article is a stub. You can help the My English Wiki by expanding it.
- Ab initio is a Latin term that means "from the beginning."
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abstract
| - From [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Ab initio]] ab (“‘from’”) + initiō, ablative singular of initium (“‘beginning’”).
- c.1600, from L., lit. "from the beginning", from ablative case of initium "entrance, beginning", related to verb inire "to go into, enter upon, begin".
- Ab initio is a Latin phrase used in English which, translated, means From the begging This article is a stub. You can help the My English Wiki by expanding it.
- Ab initio is a Latin term that means "from the beginning."
|