Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Possessing inner or physical strength; powerful.
- adjective Exerting or capable of exerting strong physiological or chemical effects.
- adjective Exerting or capable of exerting strong influence; cogent.
- adjective Having great control or authority.
- adjective Able to achieve and maintain an erection that allows for sexual intercourse. Used of a male.
from The Century Dictionary.
- Powerful; possessed of inherent strength.
- Powerful in a moral sense; having great influence; cogent; prevailing; convincing: as, potent arguments; potent interest.
- Having great authority, control, or dominion.
- In heraldry, divided or included by a line or lines forming a series of potents: as, a fesse potent. [In this sense originally
potenté .] - noun A prince; a potentate.
- noun A crutch; a walking-staff.
- noun In heraldry: A figure resembling the head of a crutch, and consisting of a parallelogram laid horizontally on the top of a small square.
- noun A fur made up of patches or figures.
- noun In watch-making, a journal plate or bearing.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun obsolete A prince; a potentate.
- noun obsolete A staff or crutch.
- noun (Her.) One of the furs; a surface composed of patches which are supposed to represent crutch heads; they are always alternately argent and azure, unless otherwise specially mentioned.
- noun (Her.) a fur differing from potent in the arrangement of the patches.
- adjective Producing great physical effects; forcible; powerful' efficacious.
- adjective Having great authority, control, or dominion; puissant; mighty; influential.
- adjective Powerful, in an intellectual or moral sense; having great influence
- adjective (Her.) See
Illust. (7) ofCross .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Possessing
strength - adjective Being
effective in smallquantities . - adjective Having a
sharp oroffensive taste. - adjective of a male able to
procreate . - adjective
very powerful oreffective . - noun heraldry A
heraldic fur formed by a regulartessellation of blue and white T shapes.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective having or wielding force or authority
- adjective (of a male) capable of copulation
- adjective having great influence
- adjective having a strong physiological or chemical effect
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Third receiver in potent passing game and a solid punt returner whose offseason work set an example for other young players.
Annual All-Joe team: Honoring those who won little acclaim 2009
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But it's what we're used to, and still remain potent symbols in an age devoid of symbolism.
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"Like its similarly underrated cousin, Birth, Joshua makes up in potent atmosphere and formal mastery what it lacks in narrative logic; unlike Birth, however, it's further enhanced by two superlative adult performances (courtesy Sam Rockwell and Vera Farmiga) that invest a ludicrous premise with conviction and behavioral nuance."
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I think the Reload power's more potent from a protective standpoint, but the Google-fu stands to make me more powerful in the world.
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“White Disaster,” some called the potent dwarven drink.
Stormblade Berberick, Nancy Varian 1988
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These results on depancreatized dogs showed beyond doubt that the antidiabetic hormone was present in potent form in the extracts, and the time seemed ripe to investigate their action on the clinical forms of diabetes.
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However, when the Redskins, one year removed from 4-12 and one week after a two-touchdown loss to the Rams, beat the Eagles, previously presumed to be potent, that is fairly stunning.
Redskins' Donovan McNabb is the homecoming king in Philadelphia, but he wasn't alone Thomas Boswell 2010
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Alcohol is particularly dangerous for teenagers because it is so pervasive in our adult world (and in most human cultures generally), but is not identified as the potent drug it is.
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It's very potent, which is good, given the cost, and it puts me in a wonderful mood.
Anise and Licorice- Love It or Loathe It, Some Gotta Have It Marina Geigert 2008
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Using neuroscience and the most advanced brain-scanning technique available today—the fMRI—global research institute Millward Brown studied the brains of twenty men and women in the UK to find out whether the “Royal Mail experiment” had created true emotional engagement, that is to say, a potent emotional response, in consumers.
Brand Sense Martin Lindstrom 2005
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