"In Excelsis Deo" is written in Latin.
"Gloria in excelsis Deo" is Latin.
In eckskelsees deeoh
In Excelsis Deo was created on 1999-12-15.
It means: Glory in the highest to the Lord
Vivaldi composed his "Gloria in Excelsis Deo" in 1713.
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."
"God in the Highest", as in "Gloria in excelcis Deo", meaning "Glory to God in the Highest".
gloria-in-excelsis-deomeans Glory in the highest. I think it was part of prayer from the Catholic Church.
Deo is either the dative singular or ablative singular form of the word for "god," deus. How it is translated depends on the context.Gloria in excelsis Deo. "Glory to God in the highest."Deo volente. "God willing."Deum de Deo. "God from God."
"In excelsis" is Latin for 'in the highest'. The phrase is found in many Christian expressions in the New Testament. It is also a part of the ordinary mass, and is the title of many major classical productions. Vivaldi, Bach,, Mozart and others have musical masses in which a significant section is entitled the excelsis, or Gloria in excelsis deo. YouTube has many performances of the Gloris, as part of major musical productions through the last few hundred years.
Quite simply, Glory. Gloria in Excelsis, Deo (in Latin, and my latin is not great, so my grammar might be out... ) - is Glory in the highest, God.