Etymology
edit
From Late Middle English omnipotens, from Old French omnipotence, from Latin omnipotentia.
Pronunciation
edit
omnipotence (countable and uncountable, plural omnipotences)
- Unlimited power; commonly attributed to a deity or deities.
Related terms
edit
Translations
edit
unlimited power
- Bulgarian: всемогъщие n (vsemogǎštie)
- Catalan: omnipotència f
- Czech: všemohoucnost f
- Dutch: almacht (nl) c
- Finnish: kaikkivoipaisuus (fi)
- French: omnipotence (fr) f
- Georgian: ყოვლისშემძლეობა (q̇ovlisšemʒleoba)
- German: Allmacht (de) f, Allmächtigkeit f, Omnipotenz (de) f
- Greek: παντοδυναμία (el) f (pantodynamía)
- Ancient: παντοκρατορία f (pantokratoría)
- Hungarian: mindenhatóság (hu)
- Icelandic: almætti (is) n
- Irish: uilechumhacht f
- Italian: onnipotenza (it)
- Japanese: 全能 (ja) (zennō)
- Latin: omnipotentia f
- Macedonian: семоќ f (semoḱ), семоќност f (semoḱnost)
- Old English: ælmiht f
- Polish: wszechmoc (pl) f
- Portuguese: omnipotência f (Portugal), onipotência (pt) f (Brazil)
- Romanian: omnipotență (ro) f, atotputernicie (ro) f
- Russian: всемогущество (ru) n (vsemoguščestvo)
- Serbo-Croatian: omnipotèncija (sh) f, svȅmōć f, svȅmoćnōst f svemoguć, svemogućnost f
- Spanish: omnipotencia (es) f
- Swedish: omnipotens (sv) c, allsmäktighet (sv) c
- Tagalog: pagkakayanggawinlahat
- Telugu: అనంతశక్తి (te) (anantaśakti)
- Ukrainian: всеси́лля n (vsesýllja), всемогу́тність f (vsemohútnistʹ)
- Urdu: پروردگار (parvardigār)
|