Exaudio is the Latin verb "I hear, heed or comply with". The ending -at indicates the subjunctive third person present tense: "may he hear".
Te is the accusative of the pronoun tu (you, singular)
Dominus is the nominative of the word meaning The Lord.
So: May the Lord hear you.
Dominus is the Latin word for "Lord or master". Domine is the vocative case of that noun in the phrase In te Domine
In English, 'dominus' means 'master'. ('Domina' would mean mistress.)
Dominus illuminati means [Lord of the Enlightened One]
surrexit dominus
"Ego et Dominus sumus amici" means "I and the Lord, we are friends"
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'.
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.