I am not sure what exactly the question might be. However, since it has been here a while, I will try to guess that someone wants to know the Latin and Greek words that are rendered by the word "power" in Acts 1:8. In St. Jerome's Vulgata, the word is "virtutem," in Greek it is "dunamin". Both are in the accusative singular. "Virtutem" could be rendered by the English word "inner strength" in this context; and "dunamin" by the words power, faculty, force, skill, talent, etc. Think of all the English words that begin with DYNA, like dynamite, dynamic, dynamo...
power
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PS is a German term Pferd Strom, which translated into English is Horse Power.
Please post what language you're asking about.
Mut und Kraft"Mut und Kraft" is German and translated into English means "Courage and Power". like as in EXP. white power, Mexican power, German power.kinda like thatmut is vagina kraft is art
Potere azzurro is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "blue power."Specifically, the masculine noun potere means "power." The masculine adjective azzurro means "blue." The pronunciation is "po-TEH-reh ahts-TSOOR-roh."
to keep the king from having too much power
They are, in order: 'ryuu,' 'chikara (both power and strength), 'honshitsu,' written: 龍 力 本質
"Power" is an English equivalent of the Italian word potenza.Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article la means "the." Its singular indefinite article una means "a, one."The pronunciation is "poh-TEHN-tsah."
"Atomic power" is an English equivalent of the German word Atomkraft. The feminine singular noun translates literally as "atomic energy" or "atomic strength" and sometimes as "nuclear power." The pronunciation will be "a-TOM-kraft" in Hanoverian German.
Potenza is an Italian equivalent of the English word "power." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun is "poh-TEHN-tsah."
Servosterzo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "power steering." The masculine singular noun literally translates into English as "controlled steering" or "servant steering" through the respective combinations of the masculine singular nouns servo and sterzo. The pronunciation will be "SER-vo-STER-tso" in Italian.