This text appears elsewhere on the internet punctuated as follows: Ave Satanas! Domine Luciferi! DEUS EST MORTA - DIABOLO SUPER OMNIA! In this form it's dreadfully ungrammatical, although the intended meaning is fairly clear: "Hail Satan! Lord Lucifer! God is dead - the Devil above all!"
Ignoring this punctuation, it is possible to construe this string of words according to standard Latin grammar, assuming that the nonexistent word morta is a misspelling of mortua. It would then mean something like "Hail, Lord Satan! The god of lucifer is over all dead things for the devil."
Veni Domine was created in 1987.
Exsurge Domine was created in 1520.
Domine Database was created in 2010.
Dominus is the Latin word for "Lord or master". Domine is the vocative case of that noun in the phrase In te Domine
Astronomy Domine was created on 1967-08-05.
Domine Non Es Dignus was created in 2004.
Church of Domine Quo Vadis was created in 1637.
Domine Warren was born on March 21, 1981, in Portland, Oregon, USA.
"In te domine" is not Spanish but classic Latin. It means "in thay Lord"
bloodklat
Charles Louis Domine has written: 'Poems and prophecies' -- subject(s): Accessible book
No. the word ego always means I, never me. "Lord, direct me" would be Domine dirige me.