The Latin phrase 'Veni Domine' may be translated as follows: Come, Lord. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'veni' means '[You] come'; and 'domine' means 'lord'. According to classical Latin, the pronunciation is as follows: WAY-nee DAW-mee-nay. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is the following: VAY-nee DAW-mee-nay.
Domine means Lord and deus means God...
My Master, My God.
Lord God.
Holy is the Lord God of Hosts
Perhaps you meant dominus et deus, which would translate to "master and god" (or, in more standard religious terminology, "Lord and God").
Blackfriars Priory School's motto is 'Deus Scientiarum Dominus'.
No, 'The Lord God is your strength and your salvation' isn't the English equivalent of 'Dominus deus fortitudo mea et salvator meus'. Instead, the equivalent is The Lord God is my strength and my salvation. In the word by word translation, the noun 'dominus' means 'Lord'. The noun 'deus' means 'God'. The noun 'fortitudo' means 'strength, courage, bravery'. The possessive adjectives 'mea' and 'meus' mean 'my'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The noun 'salvator' means 'salvation'.
The motto of Ottawa University is 'Veritas vos liberabit.'.
In English, 'dominus' means 'master'. ('Domina' would mean mistress.)
Dominus illuminati means [Lord of the Enlightened One]
"Lord God, Lamb of God, son of the father"
surrexit dominus
Ita, utor Latina. or Ita, loquor linguam Latinam.
It translates to "I am the lord and master of my friend" in Latin.
The Latin sentence 'Dominus fecit' may mean The Lord has made. Or it may mean The Lord has acted. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'Dominus' means 'Lord'. The verb 'fecit' means '[he/she/it] acts or makes, does act or make, is acting or making'.