May he bless you all.
you (plural)
It means your lips.
"Bien y vos" translates to "good and you" in English. It is a casual way to ask someone how they are doing.
"You were holding swords."
quis does non iuguolo
It's Spanish for "I love thou."
"Because you were guardians"
bring your notebook
A Latin equivalent of the English 'May God bless you' is Deus te benedicat. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'Deus' means 'God'. The personal pronoun 'te' means 'you', as the second person singular form. The verb 'benedicat' means '[he/she/it] blesses, does bless, is blessing'. Another Latin equivalent is Deus vos benedicat. The personal pronoun 'vos' is the second person plural form, as 'you all'. It's used when more than one listener or reader is being blessed.
"rangez vos affaires" means "put your stuff in order / store your things"
It loosely translates to "Hell welcomes you."
Vos = You (plural)