"Not to us, Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory" is an English equivalent of "Non nobis domine non nobis sed nomini tuo da glorium."
Specifically, this is the opening sentence to Psalm 115. The adverb "non" means "not." The personal pronoun "nobis" means "to us." The noun "domine" means "Lord." The conjunction "sed" means "but." The noun "nomini" means "name." The possessive adjective "tuo" means "your." The verb "da" means "give." The noun "glorium" means "glory."
It is Latin for 'Serve the Lord'.
The phrase Et benedicite nomini ejus means "And bless His name."
"Let what is to be found in the glory of God be found" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase Quod est inveniendum ad glorium Dei sit inveniendium. Correct Latin structure tends to follow a subject, object, verb order in terms of a sentence's word order. The phrase therefore translates by word order into English as "What is to be found to the glory of God let (it) be found."
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"
Dominic in latin means powerful
De profundis clamo ad te Domine means "From the depths, I cry to Thee, Lord" It is from the 130th Psalm.
The Lord remembers = Domine meminit
o domine deus
In Latin, the monks chant "Pie Iesu domine, dona eis requiem." In English, the chant is "Merciful Lord Jesus, grant them rest."
Venite adoremus is separate from Domine Venite Adoremus is usually translated as "O come let us adore him" and Domine is - in this carol - usually translated as "Christ the Lord" but actually means "Lord".
If you are asking about the vocative, or "calling" case, it is used by inflected languages for direct address. In Latin, for example, the word lord is dominus for the nominative subject of the verb, as in Dominus vobiscum ( the lord is with you ), and domine for the vocative of address, as in Non nobis, Domine ( not to us, O Lord). The different endings on the words do for Latin what word-order does for English, which is to show who does what to whom.