"God's box" is an English equivalent of the French phrase la boîte de Dieu.
Specifically, the feminine singular definite article lais "the". The feminine noun boîte means "box". The preposition de means "of". The masculine noun Dieu translates as "God".
The pronunciation will be "la bwaht duh dyuh" in French.
"Doh duh dyuh" is the pronunciation of the French phrase don de Dieu. The masculine singular possessive phrase translates into English as "gift of God."
Ton Dieu and votre Dieu are French equivalents of the English phrase "your God." Context makes clear whether one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "to dyuh" and "vot dyuh" in French.
In French, "God provides" can be translated as "Dieu pourvoit".
"God" in English is Dieu in French.
Volonté de Dieu! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "God's will!" The declaration may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular la since French employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(la) vo-lon-teyd dyuh" in French.
Dieu tout-puissant
God's wonderful gift is 'un merveilleux don de Dieu' in French.
Do you mean the one word "bondhu," which is the Bengali word for "friend", or "bon dieu" which is French for "good God"?
"my God!"
The surname Perdue is a Middle English adaptation on the Old French phrase "par Dieu" or "by God". It is mostly found in Ireland.
"Que Dieu bénisse notre demeure" is a French phrase that translates to "May God bless our home" in English. It is a common expression used to wish for blessings and protection over one's residence.
This answer by Hubert Lamontagne is the best written description of how to pronounce ”mon dieu”: Mon : consonant ‘m’ + vowel ‘on’ (a kind of nasal ‘o’, similar to ‘on’ in ‘don’t’) Dieu : consonant ‘d’ + consonant ‘y’ + vowel ‘eu’ (a vowel with pursed lips, closest English equivalent would be ‘er’ but it doesn’t have any ‘r’ sound to it… if you know German, it’s the same as ‘ö’).