24 example sentences using power.
Power used in a sentence
Power in a sentence as a noun
They also probably had veto power and input on how it was staged.
The computer power we have available now is stunning.
Boom, I'm immediately picked up as a Jr. VP in a large and powerful, but old and crusty megacorp.
If these laws are violated, the state authorities have the power to take legal actions to enforce them.
I don't think he ever planned it that way and I'm certain this site stole valuable brain power that could have been focused on writing essays.
May she find a powerful new outlet for those talents as she moves forward, even in a difficult environment.
C & d might still be tougher, there's lots of entrenched power structures that still make it difficult for women to arrive into the top jobs.
As they gather huge amounts of power, their purpose in life becomes to guard that power jealously and to increase it as opportunities permit.
Otherwise, the other two founders will hold all the power in the organization because they, and they alone, hold that special knowledge of what investors want.
The power of anonymity is that you get to voice honest opinions without tying it up with your identity and/or feeling responsible for it.
There is very little residue in our society of the old-fashioned principled belief that it is wrong to have vast centralized power with very few checks upon it.
But they understand accessibility and they understand the power of third-party development and they eat their dogfood.
Power in a sentence as a verb
Give them the powers, and they will be misused - in this case they were used on a relative of someone nothing to do with terrorism purely for the purpose of intimidation.
Many people today do not even give pause over the idea that the government claims huge amounts of unchecked power, whether it is to fight terrorists or to expand social programs.
[1]This is a great example of why we should treat terrorism like any other crime, and why the police should never be trusted with exceptional powers simply because we feel under threat.
We have so far been lucky that none of our victims have had the military power and political will to retaliate in the vicious and violent manner that we would.
The answer, as de Tocqueville noted years ago, is not to place faith in leaders but rather to take personal responsibility in our lives and to curtail the powers of those who govern.
And, if someone already has vast power over you, it is but a small step to extend that power in a technological age by using technology to spy upon, intimidate, and control people.
Drivers ended up atomized and could not collectively bargain against the buyers of their labor, decently-sized companies who had monopsony power in the trucker marketplace.
And this is the major factor not grasped by those today who assume that society is evolving to a point that, if only right-thinking people with good motives are given enough power over our lives, they will somehow magically transform society for the good through government action.
But assaults on privacy are but a symptom of a deeper malady as modern society increasingly believes that it can hand over massive forms of unchecked government to its politicians in the naive belief that such power can be used wisely if only we have right-thinking leaders at the helm.
The salient quote from Greenwald's article on this:They completely abused their own terrorism law for reasons having nothing whatsoever to do with terrorism: a potent reminder of how often governments lie when they claim that they need powers to stop "the terrorists", and how dangerous it is to vest unchecked power with political officials in its name.
Much in the same way, when you've crammed the ifs and elses, the fors and whiles, the variables and constants, the pointers and pointers to pointers, and pointers to functions, and pointers to pointers to pointers to functions, and then you go on to build that thingamabob or model that gene sequence or understand that earthquake, then you realize the true power of what you've been working with.
Why, when these leaders are allowed to lord it over us as they see fit, should they suddenly develop scruples in gathering information that only serves to enhance their power to do what we are already letting them do without so much as a peep of principled opposition?Privacy is in significant peril, and it is a serious loss when Groklaw goes down over this issue.
Power definitions
possession of controlling influence; "the deterrent power of nuclear weapons"; "the power of his love saved her"; "his powerfulness was concealed by a gentle facade"
See also: powerfulness
(physics) the rate of doing work; measured in watts (= joules/second)
possession of the qualities (especially mental qualities) required to do something or get something done; "danger heightened his powers of discrimination"
See also: ability
(of a government or government official) holding an office means being in power; "being in office already gives a candidate a great advantage"; "during his first year in office"; "during his first year in power"; "the power of the president"
See also: office
one possessing or exercising power or influence or authority; "the mysterious presence of an evil power"; "may the force be with you"; "the forces of evil"
See also: force
a mathematical notation indicating the number of times a quantity is multiplied by itself
physical strength
See also: might mightiness
a state powerful enough to influence events throughout the world
See also: superpower
a very wealthy or powerful businessman; "an oil baron"
supply the force or power for the functioning of; "The gasoline powers the engines"