strength

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strength

 (strĕngkth, strĕngth, strĕnth)
n.
1. The state or quality of being strong; physical power or capacity: the strength needed to lift a box.
2. The capacity to resist attack; impregnability: the strength of the ship's armor.
3. The capacity to resist strain or stress; durability: the strength of the cables.
4. The ability to deal with difficult situations or to maintain a moral or intellectual position: Does he have the strength to overcome such a tragedy?
5.
a. The number of people constituting a normal or ideal organization: The police force has been at half strength since the budget cuts.
b. Capability in terms of numbers or resources: an army of fearsome strength.
6.
a. An attribute or quality of particular worth or utility; an asset: Your easygoing nature is one of your strengths.
b. One that is regarded as the embodiment of protective or supportive power; a support or mainstay: Her family has been her strength in difficult times.
7.
a. Degree of concentration, distillation, or saturation: What's the strength of that cleaning solution?
b. Operative effectiveness or potency: the strength of the drug.
c. Intensity, as of sound or light: the strength of the wind.
d. Intensity of emotion or belief: the strength of feeling among the voters.
e. Cogency or persuasiveness: the strength of his argument.
8. Effective or binding force; efficacy: the strength of an argument.
9. Firmness of or a continuous rising tendency in prices, as of a currency or market.
10. Games Power derived from the value of playing cards held.
Idiom:
on the strength of
On the basis of: She was hired on the strength of her computer skills.

[Middle English, from Old English strengthu.]
Synonyms: strength, power, might1, energy, force
These nouns denote the capacity to act or work effectively. Strength refers especially to physical, mental, or moral robustness or vigor: "enough work to do, and strength enough to do the work" (Rudyard Kipling).
Power is the ability to do something and especially to produce an effect: "I do not think the United States would come to an end if we lost our power to declare an Act of Congress void" (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.).
Might often implies abundant or extraordinary power: "He could defend the island against the whole might of the German Air Force" (Winston S. Churchill).
Energy refers especially to a latent source of power: "The same energy of character which renders a man a daring villain would have rendered him useful to society, had that society been well organized" (Mary Wollstonecraft).
Force is the application of power or strength: "the overthrow of our institutions by force and violence" (Charles Evans Hughes).
Usage Note: Although the word strength is not spelled with a k, it is most often pronounced (strĕngkth), with a (k) sound inserted between the (ng) and the (th). This intrusive (k) occurs for a simple reason: In making the transition from the voiced velar nasal (ng) to the voiceless dental fricative (th), speakers naturally produce the voiceless velar stop (k), which is made at the same place in the mouth as (ng) but is voiceless like (th). Other words with intrusive consonants include warmth, which may sound like it is spelled warmpth, and prince, which may sound like prints. The pronunciation (strĕnth), which is made with (n) before (th), arises by the phonological process of assimilation. The velar (ng) moves forward in the mouth, becoming (n) before (th), which is made at the front of the mouth. Criticized in the past as sloppy, this pronunciation is now generally regarded as a standard, although less common, variant. The similar pronunciation of length is now also considered acceptable.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

strength

(strɛŋθ)
n
1. the state or quality of being physically or mentally strong
2. the ability to withstand or exert great force, stress, or pressure
3. something that is regarded as being beneficial or a source of power: their chief strength is technology.
4. potency, as of a drink, drug, etc
5. power to convince; cogency: the strength of an argument.
6. degree of intensity or concentration of colour, light, sound, flavour, etc
7. the full or part of the full complement as specified: at full strength; below strength.
8. (Banking & Finance) finance firmness of or a rising tendency in prices, esp security prices
9. archaic or poetic a stronghold or fortress
10. informal Austral and NZ the general idea, the main purpose: to get the strength of something.
11. from strength to strength with ever-increasing success
12. in strength in large numbers
13. on the strength of on the basis of or relying upon
[Old English strengthu; related to Old High German strengida; see strong]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

strength

(strɛŋkθ, strɛŋθ, strɛnθ)

n.
1. the quality or state of being strong; physical power; vigor.
2. intellectual or moral force.
3. power by reason of influence, authority, or resources.
4. the full force in numbers of an organization or body.
5. effective force or cogency: the strength of his plea.
6. power of resistance.
7. vigor of action, language, feeling, etc.
8. degree of concentration; intensity, as of light, color, sound, flavor, or odor.
9. a strong or valuable attribute: He was asked to list his strengths and weaknesses.
10. a source of power or encouragement; sustenance: The Bible was her strength and joy.
Idioms:
on the strength of, on the basis of.
[before 900; Middle English strengthe, Old English strengthu; see strong, -th1]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Strength

 a body of soldiers; a sufficient number.
Examples: strength of men, 1565; of people, 1500; of troops, 1400.
Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

Strength

 

See Also: BODY, COURAGE, MUSCLES, TOUGHNESS

  1. Air of impregnability that he carried with him like a briefcase full of secrets —Derek Lambert
  2. As indestructible as a bride’s first set of biscuits —Jim Murray, about football player Mike Garrett, Los Angeles Herald
  3. Bones … like bars of iron —The Holy Bible/Job
  4. Built like a bouncer in a clip joint —Saul Bellow
  5. Built like a brick shit-house —American colloquialism, popularized in American army.

    With slight alterations some of the more colorful army and country similes can be cleaned up with the original meaning still implicit. For example, in her novel, Love Medicine, Louise Erdrich describes a character as being “Built like a brick outhouse.”

  6. Built like a toolbox —Lee K. Abbott
  7. A cobweb is as good as the mightiest cable when there is no strain upon it —Henry Ward Beecher
  8. Gave off a sense of virility almost as positive as an odor —Samuel Yellen
  9. Get the upper hand … like a strong sun —Albert Camus
  10. Grew strong, as if doubt never touched his heart —Wallace Stevens
  11. (Our meaning together is) hardy as an onion (and layered) —Marge Piercy
  12. I am as strong as a bull moose —Theodore Roosevelt
  13. I am like a forest that has once been razed; the new shoots are stronger and brisker —Victor Hugo
  14. Looked as durable and tough as a tree growing on a stony hillside —Mazo De La Roche
  15. Solid and strong, like a little bull —Frank Tuohy
  16. Solid as a temple —Louis MacNeice
  17. Strong and hard as a tree —Vicki Baum

    Some other strength/tree comparisons include: “Strong as an old apple tree” (Eudora Welty) and “Sturdy as an oak trunk” (Ignazio Silone).

  18. Strong as a door —Reynolds Price
  19. Strong as a giant —Erich Maria Remarque
  20. (A soul) strong as a mountain river —William Wordsworth
  21. (An alibi as) strong as a twenty-foot wall —Jimmy Sangster
  22. (And the muscles of his brawny arms are) strong as iron bands —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  23. Strong as jealousy —William Blake
  24. Strong as money —Philip Levine

    What poet Levine is comparing to the strength of money is work.

  25. (Somone wakens to a life as) strong as the smell of urine —Philip Levine
  26. Strong as the summer sun —Anon
  27. (Had grown) strong as the sun or the sea —Algernon Charles Swinburne
  28. (This old woman is dangerous: she is as) strong as three men —George Bernard Shaw
  29. Strong as the young, and as uncontrolled —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  30. Stronger than mahogany —Anne Sexton
  31. Strong, like a tower —Nina Bawden
  32. (Vemish and his wife were) strong, like rocks, not like rivers. Their strength was more in remaining than in doing —Barry Targan
  33. (Your blunderer is as) sturdy as a rock —William Cowper
  34. Takes brute strength, like pushing a cow uphill —Anne Sexton
  35. Using his fist the way a carpenter uses a hammer —Irwin Shaw
  36. You’re [Alais addressing King Henry in The Lion in Winter] like the rocks at Stonehenge; nothing knocks you down —James Goldman
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

power

strength
1. 'power'

If someone has power, they are able to control other people and their activities.

People in positions of power, such as teachers, must act responsibly.
He believes the President has too much power.
2. 'strength'

Don't use 'power' to refer to someone's physical energy, or their ability to move heavy objects. Use strength.

It took me some time to recover my strength after the illness.
This sport requires a lot of physical strength.
Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.strength - the property of being physically or mentally strongstrength - the property of being physically or mentally strong; "fatigue sapped his strength"
property - a basic or essential attribute shared by all members of a class; "a study of the physical properties of atomic particles"
good part - a place of especial strength
brawn, brawniness, heftiness, muscularity, sinew, muscle - possessing muscular strength
might, mightiness, power - physical strength
heartiness, vigor, vigour, dynamism - active strength of body or mind
hardiness, lustiness, robustness, validity - the property of being strong and healthy in constitution
huskiness, ruggedness, toughness - the property of being big and strong
stalwartness, stoutness - the property of being strong and resolute
sturdiness - the property of something that is strongly built
firmness, soundness - the muscle tone of healthy tissue; "his muscular firmness"
indomitability, invincibility - the property being difficult or impossible to defeat
endurance - the power to withstand hardship or stress; "the marathon tests a runner's endurance"
invulnerability - the property of being invulnerable; the property of being incapable of being hurt (physically or emotionally)
weakness - the property of lacking physical or mental strength; liability to failure under pressure or stress or strain; "his weakness increased as he became older"; "the weakness of the span was overlooked until it collapsed"
2.strength - capability in terms of personnel and materiel that affect the capacity to fight a warstrength - capability in terms of personnel and materiel that affect the capacity to fight a war; "we faced an army of great strength"; "politicians have neglected our military posture"
sea power - naval strength
capability, capableness - the quality of being capable -- physically or intellectually or legally; "he worked to the limits of his capability"
firepower - (military) the relative capacity for delivering fire on a target
armed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; "their military is the largest in the region"; "the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker"
3.strength - physical energy or intensity; "he hit with all the force he could muster"; "it was destroyed by the strength of the gale"; "a government has not the vitality and forcefulness of a living man"
brunt - main force of a blow etc; "bore the brunt of the attack"
momentum, impulse - an impelling force or strength; "the car's momentum carried it off the road"
vigor, vigour, energy, zip - forceful exertion; "he plays tennis with great energy"; "he's full of zip"
intensiveness, intensity - high level or degree; the property of being intense
4.strength - an asset of special worth or utilitystrength - an asset of special worth or utility; "cooking is his forte"
asset, plus - a useful or valuable quality
green fingers, green thumb - a special ability to make plants grow
5.strength - the power to induce the taking of a course of action or the embracing of a point of view by means of argument or entreaty; "the strength of his argument settled the matter"
power, powerfulness - 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"
convincingness - the power of argument or evidence to cause belief
6.strength - the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation)strength - the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation); "he adjusted the intensity of the sound"; "they measured the station's signal strength"
radio brightness - the strength of a radio wave picked up by a radio telescope
magnitude - the property of relative size or extent (whether large or small); "they tried to predict the magnitude of the explosion"; "about the magnitude of a small pea"
threshold level - the intensity level that is just barely perceptible
field intensity, field strength - the vector sum of all the forces exerted by an electrical or magnetic field (on a unit mass or unit charge or unit magnetic pole) at a given point in the field
candlepower, light intensity - luminous intensity measured in candelas
acoustic power, sound pressure level - the physical intensity of sound
half-intensity - half the maximum intensity
7.strength - capacity to produce strong physiological or chemical effects; "the toxin's potency"; "the strength of the drinks"
power, powerfulness - 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"
8.strength - the condition of financial success; "the strength of the company's stock in recent weeks"
successfulness, prosperity - the condition of prospering; having good fortune
weakness - the condition of being financially weak; "the weakness of the dollar against the yen"
9.strength - permanence by virtue of the power to resist stress or force; "they advertised the durability of their products"
tensile strength - the strength of material expressed as the greatest longitudinal stress it can bear without tearing apart
indestructibility - the strength to resist destruction
permanence, permanency - the property of being able to exist for an indefinite duration
persistence, continuity - the property of a continuous and connected period of time
changelessness - the property of remaining unchanged
everlastingness - the property of lasting forever
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

strength

noun
1. might, muscle, brawn, sinew, brawniness He threw it forward with all his strength.
might weakness, frailty, powerlessness, infirmity, debility, feebleness
2. will, spirit, resolution, resolve, courage, character, nerve, determination, pluck, stamina, grit, backbone, fortitude, toughness, tenacity, willpower, mettle, firmness, strength of character, steadfastness, moral fibre Something gave me the strength to overcome the difficulty.
3. health, fitness, vigour, wellness, healthiness, lustiness It'll take a while before you regain full strength.
4. mainstay, anchor, tower of strength, security, rock, succour He was my strength during that terrible time.
5. toughness, soundness, robustness, sturdiness, stoutness, resistance He checked the strength of the cables.
6. power, influence, dominance, clout (informal), supremacy, ascendancy They have their own independence movement which is gathering strength.
7. force, power, intensity, energy, depth, vehemence, intenseness He was surprised at the strength of his own feeling.
force weakness, feebleness
8. potency, effectiveness, concentration, efficacy maximum strength migraine tablets
9. strong point, skill, asset, advantage, talent, forte, speciality, aptitude Take into account your own strengths and weaknesses.
strong point failing, weakness, defect, flaw, shortcoming, Achilles heel, chink in your armour
10. size, extent, magnitude, greatness, largeness the strength of the army
on the strength of something because of, due to, based on, on the basis of, by virtue of, on account of He was elected on the strength of his charisma.
under or below strength depleted, reduced, exhausted, weakened, used (up), spent, short, decreased, lessened, worn out, depreciated He was hampered by his regular troops being so much under strength.
Quotations
"Out of the mouths of very babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength" Bible: Psalm 8
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

strength

noun
1. The state or quality of being physically strong:
2. Power used to overcome resistance:
3. The condition of being free from defects or flaws:
4. Reliability in withstanding pressure, force, or stress:
5. Capacity or power for work or vigorous activity:
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations
عَدَد القُوّاتقُوَّةقُوَّه
sílaplný stav
styrkekræfter
vahvuusvoimavoimakkuus
snaga
erőlétszám
styrkleikistyrkur
強さ
plný stav
moč
styrka
ความเข้มแข็ง
sức lực

strength

[streŋθ] N
1. (= might, energy) (for particular task) → fuerzas fpl; (= general attribute) → fuerza f
he hadn't the strength to lift itno tenía fuerzas para levantarlo
his strength failed himle fallaron las fuerzas
she swims to build up the strength in her musclesnada para fortalecer los músculos or coger fuerza en los músculos
you don't know your own strengthno controlas tu propia fuerza
you'll soon get your strength backpronto recobrarás las fuerzas or te repondrás
to save one's strengthahorrar las energías
with all my strengthcon todas mis fuerzas
2. (= fortitude) → fortaleza f, fuerzas fpl; (= firmness) [of belief, conviction] → firmeza f
his help gives me the strength to carry onsu ayuda me da fortaleza or fuerzas para seguir adelante
strength of characterfortaleza f or firmeza f de carácter
to draw strength from sthsacar fuerzas de algo
the independence movement is gathering strengthel movimiento independiente está cobrando fuerza
give me strength!¡Dios dame paciencia!
inner strengthfuerza interior
strength of purposedeterminación f
see also gather, tower
3. (= sturdiness) [of material, structure, frame] → resistencia f
4. (= power) [of argument] → lo convincente, solidez f; [of claim, case, evidence] → peso m; [of protests] → lo enérgico; [of magnet, lens, drug] → potencia f; [of wind] → fuerza f; [of alcohol] → graduación f
on the strength of that success she applied for promotionen base a ese éxito, solicitó un ascenso
he was recruited on the strength of his communication skillslo contrataron en virtud de or debido a su aptitud para comunicarse
5. (= intensity) [of emotion] → intensidad f, fuerza f; [of sound] → potencia f; [of colour] → intensidad f
he warned the government not to underestimate the strength of feeling among votersadvirtió al gobierno que no subestimara la intensidad or fuerza de los sentimientos de los votantes
6. [of currency] (= value) → valor m; (= high value) → solidez f, fuerza f
our decision will depend on the strength of the poundnuestra decisión dependerá del valor de la libra
exports fell owing to the strength of the poundlas exportaciones bajaron debido a la solidez or la fuerza de la libra
7. (= good point, asset) → punto m fuerte
their chief strength is technologysu punto fuerte es la tecnología
to go from strength to strength his movie career is going from strength to strengthsu carrera cinematográfica marcha viento en popa
the company has gone from strength to strengthla empresa ha ido teniendo un éxito tras otro
8. (in number) → número m (Mil, Police) → efectivos mpl
he has promised to increase the strength of the police forceha prometido incrementar los efectivos de la policía
to be below strength = to be under strength
to be at full strength [army] → disponer de todos sus efectivos (Sport) [team] → contar con todos sus jugadores; [office] → contar con todo el personal
his supporters were there in strength or had come in strengthsus partidarios habían acudido en masa
to be on the strength (gen) → formar parte de la plantilla (Mil) → formar parte del regimiento
to take sb on to the strengthadmitir a algn en la plantilla (Mil) → admitir a algn en el regimiento
to be under strength the team was under strength due to injuriesel equipo contaba con pocos jugadores debido a las lesiones
two people are off sick so we're a bit under strengthdos de los empleados se encuentran enfermos y estamos un poco cortos de personal
his army was seriously under strengthsu ejército contaba con poquísimos efectivos
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

strength

[ˈstrɛŋθ] n
(= physical force) [person, muscles] → force f
to recover one's strength → reprendre des forces
with all one's strength → de toute ses forces
(= confidence, courage) → force f
Something gave me the strength to overcome the difficulty → Quelque chose m'a donné la force de surmonter cette difficulté.
strength of character → force f de caractère
strength of mind → force f mentale
[girder, knot, rope, cable, material] → solidité f
(= power, influence) [person, organization] → puissance f
The movement is gathering strength → Le mouvement gagne en puissance.
to go from strength to strength → aller de succès en succès
on the strength of sth (= because of) → en raison de qch
(= intensity) [feeling, opinion, belief] → force f
(= good quality) [person] → force f
Take into account your own strengths and weaknesses → Prenez en compte vos propres forces et faiblesses.
[currency, economy, industry] → force f
(= number) at full strength → au grand complet
below strength → en sous-effectif
to turn out in strength → arriver en force
[wind, sun, current, storm] → force f
(= concentration) [chemical solution] → titre m; [wine] → degré m d'alcool; [drug] → puissance f
[flavour, smell] → force f; [sound] → puissance f; [colour] → intensité f
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

strength

n
(lit, fig)Stärke f; (of person, feelings)Kraft f; (of table, bolt, nail, wall)Stabilität f; (of material, character)Stärke f, → Festigkeit f; (of conviction, shoes)Festigkeit f; (of views)Überzeugtheit f; (of imagination)Lebhaftigkeit f; (of reason, argument, evidence)Überzeugungskraft f; (of plea, protest)Eindringlichkeit f; (of letter)geharnischte or starke Ausdrucksweise; (of measure)Drastik f; strength of character/will or mindCharakter-/Willensstärke f; to increase in or gain strengthstärker werden; on the strength of somethingaufgrund einer Sache (gen); he decided to be a writer on the strength of selling one short storyer beschloss, Schriftsteller zu werden, nachdem er eine einzige Kurzgeschichte verkauft hatte; his strength failed himseine Kräfte versagten, ihn verließen die Kräfte; to be beyond somebody’s strengthüber jds Kräfte (acc)gehen; to save one’s strengthmit seinen Kräften haushalten or Haus halten; you don’t know your own strength!du weißt gar nicht, wie stark du bist!; to argue from a position of strengthvon einer starken Position aus argumentieren; to go from strength to strengtheinen Erfolg nach dem anderen erzielen or haben; he was a great strength to meer war mir eine große Stütze
(= health, of constitution) → Robustheit f, → Kräftigkeit f; (of eyes, heart)Stärke f; the patient is recovering his strengthder Patient kommt wieder zu Kräften; when she has her strength backwenn sie wieder bei Kräften ist
(of colour)Kräftigkeit f, → Intensität f; (of acid, bleach)Stärke f; (of diluted solution)Konzentration f
(= numbers)(An)zahl f; (Mil) → Stärke f; to be at full strengthvollzählig sein; to bring something up to strengthetw vollzählig machen; to be up to/below or under strength(die) volle Stärke/nicht die volle Stärke haben; to turn out in strengthin großer Zahl kommen, zahlreich erscheinen; the police were there in strengthein starkes Polizeiaufgebot war da
(of currency)Stärke f; (of market prices)Stabilität f; (of economy)Gesundheit f
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

strength

[strɛŋθ] n
a. (gen) (fig) → forza; (of wall, nail, wood) → solidità; (of rope) → resistenza; (of chemical solution) → concentrazione f; (of wine) → gradazione f alcolica
you'll soon get your strength back → presto ti rimetterai in forze
his strength failed him → gli sono mancate le forze
strength of character/mind → forza di carattere/d'animo
strength of purpose → risolutezza
on the strength of → sulla base di, in virtù di
to go from strength to strength → andare di bene in meglio
b. (Mil) → effettivo
below/at full strength → con gli effettivi ridotti/al completo
to come in strength (fig) → venire in gran numero
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

strong

(stroŋ) adjective
1. firm, sound, or powerful, and therefore not easily broken, destroyed, attacked, defeated, resisted, or affected by weariness, illness etc. strong furniture; a strong castle; a strong wind; She's a strong swimmer; He has a very strong will/personality; He has never been very strong (= healthy); He is not strong enough to lift that heavy table.
2. very noticeable; very intense. a strong colour; a strong smell.
3. containing a large amount of the flavouring ingredient. strong tea.
4. (of a group, force etc) numbering a particular amount. An army 20,000 strong was advancing towards the town.
ˈstrongly adverb
strength (streŋθ) noun
1. the quality of being strong. He got his strength back slowly after his illness; I hadn't the strength to resist him.
2. the number of people etc in a force, organization etc, considered as an indication of its power or effectiveness. The force is below strength.
strengthen (ˈstreŋθən) verb
to make or become strong or stronger. He did exercises to strengthen his muscles; The wind strengthened.
ˈstrongbox noun
a safe or box for valuables.
strong drink
alcoholic liquors.
ˈstronghold noun
a fort, fortress or castle etc.
strong language
swearing or abuse.
ˌstrong-ˈminded adjective
having determination.
strong point
a quality, skill etc in which a person excels. Arithmetic isn't one of my strong points.
strongroom noun
a room specially constructed for keeping valuable articles, with thick walls and a heavy steel door etc.
on the strength of
relying on. On the strength of this offer of money, we plan to start building soon.
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

strength

قُوَّة síla styrke Kraft σθένος fuerza vahvuus force snaga forza 強さ kracht styrke siła força сила styrka ความเข้มแข็ง güç sức lực 实力
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

strength

n. fuerza, vigor, resistencia.
English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

strength

n fuerza; the strength in your hand..la fuerza de su mano...to recover your strength..recuperar su(s) fuerza( s); double-strength de doble fuerza, de doble dosis; extra-strength de fuerza extra; physical — fuerza física
English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Fertilizer additives such as granulating aids are often deployed to improve crushing strength and reducing fines in fertilizer.
and European countries, are mature markets for impact crusher due to the growing demand for enhanced crushing strength against high abrasive materials.
(17) The machine was adjusted to compress tablets of 250[+ or -]0.05 mg mean weight, 9.0[+ or -]0.02 mm mean diameter, and of the highest crushing strength, H, and lowest friability, F, levels that could be achieved from the batch formulated with 75% w/w (the highest concentration) of a given excipient.
The crushing strength of the larger particle is lower because there are more interior flaws in it.
Concrete 02 in OS was used for simulating the concrete material, which was realized by defining the initial elastic tangent ([E.sub.o]), compressive strength ([f.sub.c]'), compressive strain ([[epsilon].sub.co] = 4[f.sub.c]'/[E.sub.o]), ultimate strength (or crushing strength for unconfined concrete) ([f.sub.cu]), ultimate strain (or crushing strain for unconfined concrete) ([[epsilon].sub.cu]), tensile strength ([f.sub.t]), and ratio (A) between unloading slopes at [[epsilon].sub.cu] and [E.sub.o], as shown in Figure 4.
'One-dimensional compression behaviour of uniformly graded sand related to single particle crushing strength'.
* To determine crushing strength (the ability to resist a mechanical piston).
The mechanical and release properties of paracetamol tablets containing the extracted celluloses and two standard disintegrants- corn starch B.P and microcrystalline cellulose - were determined using crushing strength friability disintegration time the time taken for 50% (T50) and 90% (T90) drug dissolution as assessment parameter.
The initial values of the crushing strength of the OC particles are not a suitable characteristic to evaluate the particle lifetime in the process.