This is not a grammatical sentence in Latin, because the pronoun ego ("I") and the verb amat ("loves") clash. If the intended meaning is "I love you", you should say just te amo, because the verb form amo includes the first-person subject "I".
amat Victoria aeris
"Ego amo te ____" = "I love you ___________"
amat victoria curam
Te amo.
I love you.
Ego amo te
The cast of Ego te Absolvo - 2012 includes: Fabio Costanzo as Avv.to francesco paolo di blasi
I like = ego amo
It is a Latin verb meaning "he/she loves."
Pol Amat's birth name is Pol Amat Escud.
Amat Escalante's birth name is Amat Escalante Wool.
In Latin, Deus is the word for "God" and te is the word for "you" (singular), but Deus te doesn't express a compete thought; we're missing a verb (at least). Still, we can tell that one of the following is true:"God" is the subject of the verb and "you" is the object. E.g., Deus te amat, "God loves you""God" is the addressee and (as "you") also the object. E.g., Deus te amamus, "O God, we love you"