Okay then all you oneness and Christadelphians want to do is wrangle about words. The word translated Lord or lord in Scripture (depending on who is being referred to) and means:
OT:113
'adown (or , shortened, 'adon)--
firm, strong, lord, master
1) lord, master
a) referring to men:
1) a superintendant of a household, a superintendant of affairs
2) a master
3) a king
b) referring to God:
1) the Lord God
2) the Lord of the whole earth
2) lords, kings
a) referring to men:
1) a proprietor of a hill of Samaria
2) a master
3) a husband
4) a prophet
5) a governor
6) a prince
7) a king
b) referring to God: the Lord of lords (probably = "your husband, Yahweh")
3) my lord, my master
a) referring to men:
1) a master
2) a husband
3) a prophet
4) a prince
5) a king
6) a father
7) Moses
8 ) a priest
9) a theophanic angel
10) a captain
11) general recognition of superiority
b) referring to God:
1) my Lord, my Lord and my God
2) Adonai (parallel with Yahweh)
(from The Online Bible Thayer's Greek Lexicon and Brown Driver & Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, Copyright (c)1993, Woodside Bible Fellowship, Ontario, Canada. Licensed from the Institute for Creation Research.)
The Word translated LORD is Yahovah in some passages and in others is:
OT:136
'Adonay (ad-o-noy'); am emphatic form of OT:113; the Lord (used as a proper name of God only):
KJV - (my) Lord.
(Biblesoft's New Exhaustive Strong's Numbers and Concordance with Expanded Greek-Hebrew Dictionary. Copyright (c) 1994, Biblesoft and International Bible Translators, Inc.)
ADONAI
(a-do'-ni), (ad-o-na'-i) ('adhonay): A Divine name, translated "Lord," and signifying, from its derivation, "sovereignty." Its vowels are found in the Massoretic Text with the unpronounceable tetragrammaton YHWH; and when the Hebrew reader came to these letters, he always substituted in pronunciation the word " 'adhonay." Its vowels combined with the tetragrammaton form the word "Yahweh (Jehovah)." See GOD, NAMES OF.
(from International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia, Electronic Database Copyright (c)1996 by Biblesoft)
In some passages ADONIA is rendered Lord and in others LORD.