No. the word ego always means I, never me. "Lord, direct me" would be Domine dirige me.
It means dodo
Dominus is the Latin word for "Lord or master". Domine is the vocative case of that noun in the phrase In te Domine
"In te domine" is not Spanish but classic Latin. It means "in thay Lord"
Jesus Christ Lord
It is Latin for 'Serve the Lord'.
This phrase means " in you, O Lord"
a.d. when used for the date means "in the year of our Lord" anno domine
The Latin phrase 'Veni Domine' may be translated as follows: Come, Lord. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'veni' means '[You] come'; and 'domine' means 'lord'. According to classical Latin, the pronunciation is as follows: WAY-nee DAW-mee-nay. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is the following: VAY-nee DAW-mee-nay.
bloodklat
This is an antiphon from the Roman Catholic chant repertoire. The full text is Parce Domine, parce populo tuo; ne in aeternum irascaris nobis, and means "Spare, O Lord, spare your people; do not be angry with us forever."
In Latin, the monks chant "Pie Iesu domine, dona eis requiem." In English, the chant is "Merciful Lord Jesus, grant them rest."
"From your altar, Lord, we congratulate ourselves in Christ, in whom our heart and flesh rejoice."