In manus Dei is the Latin equivalent of 'in God's hands'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'manus' means 'hands'. The noun 'Dei' means 'God'.
God's Word Translation was created in 1995.
Opus Dei is the Latin equivalent of 'God's work'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'opus', in the nominative singular case as the subject of the sentence, means 'work'. The noun 'Dei', in the genitive singular case as the object of possession, means 'of God'.
Redemisti Deus
Literally word for word, that's "God light our is". The way sentence structure works out in Latin it comes out to "God is our light" (or "Our light is God," though that probably would have been written "Lux nostra Deus est.").
The Latin word is "Deus".
Ubi est tuus Deus?
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Dei is a form of the word "deus" meaning "a god" or "God". It's either the genitive singular ("of God/of a god") or the nominative/vocative plural ("gods" as a sentence subject).
One Latin equivalent of 'Go with God' is I cum Deo. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'i' is an imperative verb meaning '[you] go'. The preposition 'cum' means 'with'. The noun 'Deo' means 'God'.Another Latin equivalent is Ite cum Deo. In this case, the verb is in the second person plural instead of the second person singular. The translation therefore is 'you all', in regard to more than one listener.
The Latin equivalent of the English sentence 'To live is to love God' is the following: Vivere est amare Deum. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'vivere' means 'to live'; 'est' means '[it] is'; 'amare' means 'to love'; and 'Deum' means 'God'. The pronunciation is the following: VEE-veh-ray ehst ah-MAH-ray DAY-oom.
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'mind's eye' is Oculus mentis. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'oculus' means 'eye'. The noun 'mentis' means 'mind'.