The English meaning of 'Ordo ab chao deus jus' is God created law and order out of chaos. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'ordo' means 'order'. The preposition 'ab' means 'from, out of'. The noun 'chao' means 'chaos'. The noun 'deus' means 'God'. The noun 'jus' means 'law'.
The only words I know that mean that are in Latin, not English: ordo ab chao
from the beginning
It is pronounced OR- doe ahb KA-oh
Ab initiō.
There are few alternatives: 1.) Ab initio. (From the beginning) 2.) Ab ovo. (From the egg.) 3.) Ab aeterno. (From the beginning of time)
Doesn't really make sense. There's no word "ab" in Hebrew; if it's אב, today we pronounce it "av," not "ab." "Av ono" would approximately mean "father (of) his strength" but is awkwardly worded. Maybe you were looking for a language other than Hebrew or a different phrase.
ab urbe condita = from the founding of the city
Bacio e abbraccio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Kiss and hug." the masculine singular noun, conjunction, and masculine singular noun also translate into English as "Kiss and embrace." The pronunciation will be "BA-tcho ey ab-BRAT-tcho" in Italian.
After is one English equivalent of 'ab'. Away fromis another equivalent. Either way, the Latin word 'ab' is a preposition whose object is in the ablative case.
Somnia videri possunt ab omnibus qui videre volunt.
"What affects everyone is decided by everyone."It's a bit of a surprise that the last word isn't the subjunctive form decidatur, "Let what affects everyone be decided by everyone". A more frequent expression of the same idea is quod omnes tangit, ab omnibus probari debet, "What affects everyone ought to be approved by everyone."