Here are some possibilities, used in different contexts: vox, virtus, vires, vis, praesentia, presencia, potestas, vis vires, potentia, opulentia, presentia, ops, nomen, facultas, auctorita Poder is Latin for power. The English version is "potent" meaning powerful.
Some possibilities:
Some words related to the above: potent, potential, omnipotent, fortification, fortified, Magna Carta, magnificent, magnitude, valient
potestatum
Second answer: The answer above is incorrect to an extent, the answerer has given the genitive plural of power, which literally means 'of the powers'.
The Latin word for power is potestas.
If you mean power as in authority. Imperium
Potestas.
The Latin word vis means "power, force."
potis
Its the word vis.
Virtus Lucem
The Latin root is Posse meaning, to be able
It is a Latin word of the same spelling, meaning one who has absolute power and authority. In Latin use, a dictator was a judge in the Roman Republic invested with absolute power
The word is originally from the Latin word deus. This is the word for god in Latin. Deists are people who believe there is a higher power, but it is not necessarily the Christian god.
"Possibility" is one of the possible translations of the Latin word potestas (also "power; ability").
Dynamic does not derive from Latin. It comes from a Greek word, dunamis, meaning power.
Force; power., Physical force., Moral power.
That would be imperium (-i, n. ), "the power to command."