The English adjective "divine" corresponds to two Latin adjectives: (1) "divus, -a, -um," meaning "deified, divine," "of or belonging to a deity," "godlike," and (2) "divinus, -a, -um," meaning "belonging to the gods," "divine," or "superhuman, supernatural." Our English verb "divine" comes from the Latin verb "divinare," which has essentially the same meaning.
Divine one in Latin would be divus for a man and diva for a woman
Divinus
The Latin term for "Divine Flower" in the language of Old Rome is "Divinus Flos."
divina flamma
This is "Lord, have mercy" in Greek with "divine fire" in Latin inserted into it.
It's French and it means 'divine'.
"Divine fiat" is the creative command of God, from the Latin word fiat, "let there be," used by God to create the universe in the Latin version of the Book of Genesis.
Divine favor, gift, present are English equivalents of 'charisma'. The word is of Greek origin. Its equivalents in Latin are donum, which means 'gift'; and gratia, which means 'divine favor'.
false
Like most religious Latin, the literal meaning is not going to help you as much as the concept. "Numen" is the power of a deity and "divinium" is "divine/divinity." So, both words resemble each other. Think of "numen divinium" as "Divine might" or somesuch.
Deanna is a female given name. The name is of Latin or Old English origin. In Latin origins, it means divine , but in Old English , it means ÔGirl From The ValleyÕ
Dianell is a female, Spanish name of Latin origin. It comes from the same root as Diane, mean divine.