God created man and woman.
quod Deus bene vertat = "may God grant success"
That which God wills is the English equivalent of 'Quod Deus vult'. In the word by word translation, the relative 'quod' means 'that which'. The noun 'Deus' means 'God'. The verb 'vult' means '[he/she/it] wills, wishes'.
The motto of Bishop Eustace Preparatory School is 'Quod Deus Vult'.
The English equivalent of the Latin command 'Quod Deus iunxit homo non separet' is Those whom God has joined together, let not man put asunder. In the word-by-word translation, the relative pronoun 'quod' means 'those whom', as the accusative singular of 'quod' in the neuter gender. The noun 'Deus' means 'God', as the nominative singular of the masculine gender. The verb 'iunxit' means '[he/she/it] has joined', as the third person singular of the perfect indicative of 'iungere'. The noun 'homo' means 'man', as the nominative singular of the masculine gender. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The verb 'separet' means '[he/he/it] let put asunder', as the third person singular of the present subjunctive of 'separare'.
Idem velle quod vult Deus means "to want the same thing God wants."Originally the Latin alphabet did not have separate letters for the vowel 'u' and the consonant 'v' (which was originally pronounced as a 'w'). The continued use of 'v' for 'u' is rare in modern times, but this quotation provides an example in 'devs' for 'deus'. But in this scheme 'quod' should be 'qvod' and 'vult' should be 'vvlt'.
Age Quod Agis Means Do What You Are Doing
The Latin word quod has the basic meaning "that" and can be used in a number of different ways.In the phrase eris quod sum (see link below), it has the meaning "that which" or "what" so that the whole phrase means "You will be what I am".Quod can also be a conjunction meaning "in that" or "because", so that the phrase quod sum, if taken by itself, can mean "because I am".
Because I hold/have, I will hold/have.
"Because you were guardians"
Quod dixisti? (= What did you say? in Latin)I think you mean 'me gusta' = I like
"It is what it is", and that's Latin.
That which he wants, he wants very much.