|
FORCE |
Physical power |
|
STRENGTH |
Physical power |
|
MUSCLE |
Physical power |
|
ARREST |
Any seizure by power, physical or moral. |
|
|
NERVE |
Physical force or steadiness; muscular power and control;
constitutional vigor. |
|
EMPOWER |
To give moral or physical power, faculties, or
abilities to. |
|
INCAPACITY |
Want of capacity; lack of physical or intellectual
power; inability. |
|
OPERATION |
The act or process of operating; agency; the exertion of
power, physical, mechanical, or moral. |
|
|
ENGINE |
A compound machine by which any physical power is applied
to produce a given physical effect. |
|
OPERATE |
To perform a work or labor; to exert power or strengh,
physical or mechanical; to act. |
|
FREE WILL |
The power asserted of moral beings of willing or choosing
without the restraints of physical or absolute necessity. |
|
STRONG |
Having active physical power, or great physical power
to act; having a power of exerting great bodily force; vigorous. |
|
CAPACITY |
The power of receiving or containing; extent of room or
space; passive power; -- used in reference to physical things. |
|
NECESSITY |
That which makes an act or an event unavoidable;
irresistible force; overruling power; compulsion, physical or moral;
fate; fatality. |
|
IMPOTENT |
Not potent; wanting power, strength. or vigor. whether
physical, intellectual, or moral; deficient in capacity; destitute of
force; weak; feeble; infirm. |
|
OPERATIVE |
Having the power of acting; hence, exerting force,
physical or moral; active in the production of effects; as, an
operative motive. |
|
POTENCY |
The quality or state of being potent; physical or moral
power; inherent strength; energy; ability to effect a purpose;
capability; efficacy; influence. |
|
DISABILITY |
State of being disabled; deprivation or want of
ability; absence of competent physical, intellectual, or moral power,
means, fitness, and the like. |
|
CONSENT |
Capable, deliberate, and voluntary assent or agreement to,
or concurrence in, some act or purpose, implying physical and mental
power and free action. |
|
AGENT |
An active power or cause; that which has the power to
produce an effect; as, a physical, chemical, or medicinal agent; as,
heat is a powerful agent. |
|
MONAD |
The elementary and indestructible units which were conceived
of as endowed with the power to produce all the changes they undergo,
and thus determine all physical and spiritual phenomena. |
|
INFLUENCE |
To control or move by power, physical or moral; to
affect by gentle action; to exert an influence upon; to modify, bias,
or sway; to move; to persuade; to induce. |
|
SECOND-SIGHT |
The power of discerning what is not visible to the
physical eye, or of foreseeing future events, esp. such as are of a
disastrous kind; the capacity of a seer; prophetic vision. |
|
ABILITY |
The quality or state of being able; power to perform,
whether physical, moral, intellectual, conventional, or legal;
capacity; skill or compete... |
|
DISABLE |
...ce,
vigor, or power of action of; to deprive of competent physical or
intellectual power; to incapacitate; to disqualify; to make incompetent
... |