Deo is the dative or ablative singular form of the word deus, "god". Standing by itself it's probably dative: "to or for a god", "to/for the god", "to/for God". If it follows a preposition it's ablative, for example a deo, "by [a/the] god".
In Latin, the word for God is deus.
The form deo is the singular dative or ablative case. so it can mean "to or for God", or "with, by, or by means of God" depending on the context and whether it is dative or ablative.
"From God" (or "from a god").
Praise be to God
"God in the Highest", as in "Gloria in excelcis Deo", meaning "Glory to God in the Highest".
It means: Glory in the highest to the Lord
If optima is the plural form of optimum, then rather than Optima Cum Deo meaning "Everything with God" it could be better translated "The best with God" .
I think its buan chara go deo, which means best friends forever.
it is a word that come from church
The translation is "to God in the highest." For example, when someone says "Gloria in excelsis Deo" they are saying "Glory to God in the highest."
Deo Optimo Maxima It is Latin meaning: To God, Best and Greatest
"Laus Deo" is Latin for "Praise be to God." In Portuguese, this phrase can be translated as "Louvado seja Deus."
Ajinkya Deo's birth name is Ajinkya Ramesh Deo.
What laus exsisto ut deus is in Latin is a really terrible translation of "praise be to God" by a translation web site that has no idea what it's doing. It comes out meaning something like "I, praise, emerge as God".A proper translation of "praise be to God" would be simply laus Deo, or if you insist on a verb (Latin syntax doesn't in this case), sit laus Deo.
Every bottle of Benedictine has this on the label, meaning Deo Optimo Maximo - for the Best Greatest God