This is a line from a poem by the Roman poet Sextus Aurelius Propertius. The full sentence is:
Tu mihi sola domus, tu, Cynthia, sola parentes,
Omnia tu nostrae tempora laetitiae.
This can be translated:
You alone are home to me, you alone, Cynthia, my parents,
You, all the seasons of our joy.
Forever and ever
Truth conquers all.
All my things are gifts from God is the English equivalent of 'Omnia mei dona Dei'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'omnia' means 'all'. The possessive adjective 'mei' means 'my'. The noun 'dona' means 'gifts'. The noun 'Dei' means 'God'.
Everything by force and spirit is the English equivalent of 'Omnia vi et anima'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'omnia' means 'all things, everything'. The noun 'vi' means 'force'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The noun 'anima' means 'spirit'.
The English translation for the painting, 'Amor Vincit Omnia' is "Love Conquers All". The language itself is written in Latin. Amor means love. Omnia means all things, or everything. Vincit means to win or conquer, in third-person.
'veritas super omnia' (truth above all), or you could stay 'honestas super omnia' (honor/integrity/honesty above all)
Omnia is simply Latin for everything.
Many know much, no one knows all.
Omnia vincit veritas
The sentence 'Omnia mea mecum porto' means I carry all my things with me. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'omnia' means 'all'. The possessive 'mea' means 'my'. The personal pronoun 'me' means 'me'. The preposition 'cum' means 'with'. The verb 'porto' means '[I] am carrying, carry, do carry'.
"all stops" in Latin. A bus or train that stops in every bus stop or train station, as opposed to a direct train that goes from one city to the terminus (the "last stop").
The phrase "nos omnia perdetu el eam" appears to be a mix of Latin and a potential typo. A corrected interpretation might be "nos omnia perdet et eam," which translates to "we will lose everything and her." The phrase suggests a sense of loss or devastation affecting both everything and a specific person.