"In all things ask God"
Latin
"Credo in unum Deum" is a Latin phrase that translates to "I believe in one God." It is a statement of faith found in the Nicene Creed, a Christian statement of beliefs adopted by the First Council of Nicaea in AD 325.
The verb form is in the third person. The phrase Deum laudat means, He/she praises God.
Deum amare ac colere
The literal translation from Latin is 'god get operation'
Deum solum timere means "to fear God alone", which captures this meaning. If you want to explicitly say "and no one else", you can add nec quemquam alium.
God Bless America is a common saying heard in the Americas. The Latin translation for this is Lorem ipsum benedicite Deum.
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.
There is no suffix in Deum Deus. If you mean the ending of Deus, then the complete "suffix" (rather ending) is -us, not -s. And the -us indicates the word is a nominative. The nominative in Latin grammar is the subject of the sentence.Here is Deus completely declined in the singular:Nominative: DeusGenitive: DeiDative: DeoAccusative: DeumAblative: Deo
If I am not mistaken, I think it means "your day", though you could probably tell better with the context clues given by the words around it. Those words don't really work in Latin. You're probably thinking of 'Te Deum'. That's the title of a Hymn, taken from the first two words, which alone don't make sense. The complete phrase is Te Deum laudamus - We praise thee, God.
The Greek word for god is theós. I found it on Google translate.
Deus tantum me damnabit Loosely translated in Latin "Only God will Judge Me" Todd from Iowa