The question cannot be answered as it is written, because it makes no sense in ordinary English usage. If the question means to say, "What can God lift?" then it must be dismissed as a nonsense question. "God" is spirit and truth, and so questions about physical strength have no meaning in relation to God. An old theological question has the same answer. "Can God create a rock that is too heavy for God to lift?" The supposed trick in the question lies in the paradox that if God can do anything, it must follow logically that God could make a rock too heavy for God to lift... but that would contradict the premise that God can do everything. The flaw in the question is the utter misunderstanding of Who and What "God" is and does.
Yes, you can, but you will fall off and die a bloody death after a squirrel eats you. After this, you will rise up to the Tiki gods and they will say, "Hello, please enjoy your stay."
The infinitive form of the word "lift" is to lift.
Lift/lifts. As in: I lift weights. The man lifts the table.
they can be gods of different things
there are no gods
levantar = to lift ascensor = lift/elevator
There are two types... To lift a car, in the form of a car lift, lift off the ground. The other is to lift a car with a suspension lift, installing taller springs, etc.
There are both bad gods and good gods when it comes to the Egyptian gods.
herculies is a greek demigod that was kidnapped by the underworld god, hades, as a child. as he grew older he became stronger and stronger, he could lift up buildings and destroy pillars. he was the son of Zeus the god of all greek gods.
Lift is not a preposition. It is a verb as in Can you lift this heavy box? or, lift is a noun as in Can you give me a lift downtown?
There is not really an answer to that but the twelve gods were born to be gods
he is the king of the gods -- NOT the father of all the gods