Holy is the Lord God of Hosts
Did you mean...civitas Dei 'state (land) of God'Civitas has a number of translations in English. "civeta dei" may be a reference to the famous work of St. Augustine of Hippo titled De civitate Dei, usually translated as "[On] the City of God."
Latin: Dominus vobiscum! = German: Der Herr sei mit euch!
It means 'God be with you' or 'The Lord be with you'.
Assuming the Roman language is also the latin language, there are many translations: vinco, rector, dominus, dominus domno, magister, domino, erus, vici, vinco vici victum
Dominus illuminati means [Lord of the Enlightened One]
surrexit dominus
The root word "dominus" means "master" or "lord" in Latin. It is often used to denote authority or ownership in words related to leadership or control.
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'.
"Lord God, Lamb of God, son of the father"
Rough translation: "If not master".
Only one God
Dominus litis is used when a lawyer (and e.g. not his client) or prosecutor (and not the defendant) is the one who is in control of a law suit.
Literally, 'pacem dominus' means 'Peace Lord'. 'Pacem Domini' means 'Peace Of the Lord'.
it means you are ugly
The literal meaning of "dominus" is master of a house. Secondary meanings are master or lord.
"Dominus fecit" is "God has made this." That might be the more even-handed way to say "A gift from God"