"grah-tsee-ah"
Dei gratia (not "Del" gratia) is "By the Grace of God"
pulchra gratia
it is the abbreviation of 'exempli gratia', meaning 'for example'.
"gratia plena" means "full of grace"
The abbreviation e.g. is for exempli gratia, but it is pronounced "for example."
gratia, like gratia plena
Gratia et pax
Gratia Countryman was born on 1866-11-26.
Gratia Countryman died on 1953-07-26.
Given the religious nature of the quotation, it's probably most appropriate to pronounce this in the Ecclesiastical (Church Latin) manner: SO-lah DAY-oh GRAH-tsee-ah.However, this is probably a misquotation; it means "thanks only [i.e., 'thanks and nothing else'] to God." Probably one or the other of the following was intended instead:Soli Deo gratia: Thanks to God alone [i.e. 'to God and no one else']Sola Dei gratia: Only by the grace of God
example of exempli gratia essay: my aepple was cut into 3 pieces
You probably mean Gratia Dei, which means "by the Grace of God". There is no word "Del" in Latin.