"Worthy of admiration, wonderful." From "admiror (to be astonished at, < ad + miror) + abilis -e (able, worthy)"
Iotaphora admirabilis was created in 1884.
Endotricha admirabilis was created in 2003.
To adore = admirari Unless you mean in the sense of to worship, to pray to: To adore = venerari
"Meu Deus" means "o my God!" in Portuguese, Usually from surprise.
Ego diligo Deus means I love God in non-grammatical Latin and Laus Deus Semper means "Praise God Always"
"Pro Deus" is ungrammatical in Latin. It doesn't mean much of anything.
quod Deus bene vertat = "may God grant success"
"God is truth."
God from humanity.
God and country.
There is no suffix in Deum Deus. If you mean the ending of Deus, then the complete "suffix" (rather ending) is -us, not -s. And the -us indicates the word is a nominative. The nominative in Latin grammar is the subject of the sentence.Here is Deus completely declined in the singular:Nominative: DeusGenitive: DeiDative: DeoAccusative: DeumAblative: Deo
"Deus ubique est." / "God is everywhere" Deus: God ubique: ubiquitious (everywhere) est: is and "totus" means all