Similar words: empower, empowerment, power, powerful, superpower, power cut, overpower, willpower. Meaning: [ɪm'paʊə] adj. invested with legal power or official authority especially as symbolized by having a scepter.
Random good picture Not show
31. If Hateley is found guilty of violent conduct, the disciplinary committee are empowered to extend the player's ban.
32. In imposing taxes for state purposes, they are not doing what Congress is empowered to do.
33. According to the new law local parliaments would be empowered to conduct inspection and auditing of local governments.
34. Emergency regulations empowered the government to declare virtual martial law at will.
35. His government, he suggested, had empowered the military to make all tactical decisions necessary to resolve the conflict.
36. Health officers in Macclesfield are to be empowered to go into houses and switch off noisy burglar alarms.
37. The Foreign Compensation Commission was empowered by statute to deal with claims to compensation under agreements with foreign governments.
38. The new law also empowered parliament to veto any government decision on direct links within 30 days.
39. Knowing more about her pregnancy should have empowered her, but in fact it did the opposite.
40. It empowered local councils to enter gardens and cut down problem hedges if their owners refuse to cooperate.
41. The board is also empowered to hold such other meetings as it considers appropriate.
42. She said many people feel empowered by the technology because they can take care of business more efficiently.
43. Umpires are even empowered to use their own initiative to ensure that a game reaches an equitable outcome.
44. Though flogging was restricted, the length of sentences which lower courts were empowered to impose was doubled.
45. They are empowered by their client, who is the boss.
46. A loss had been turned to a profit and teamwork has led to empowered people with a commitment to the business.
47. It is enacted not by the ordinary legislative authority but by some higher and specially empowered body.
48. They were empowered to improve a range of local facilities from transport, credit, and insurance to health and education.
49. Federal courts would be empowered to impose the death sentence for 51 crimes.
50. The police were empowered to direct and to route processions, but a ban could only come from the Home Secretary.
51. The Workhouse Act of 1723 had empowered parishes to apply a workhouse test by denying relief to those who refused to enter.
52. In return,[www.Sentencedict.com] local authorities were empowered to appoint the teachers in such schools for all subjects other than religious instruction.
53. The relevant statute empowered the council to pay such wages as it thought fit.
54. Employees may return from a seminar or workshop feeling empowered, energetic, creative, and open to new alternatives.
55. To be empowered is to be able to take care of oneself and to have influence on others.
56. Wood is empowered to return Milken to prison for up to the maximum 10-year sentence that she originally imposed.
57. They know full well that Joe Biden and other newly empowered Democrats share their doubts on missile defence.
58. Aldous Huxley, in Brave New World, got it wrong: rather than centralizing power in the hands of the state, DNA technology has empowered individuals and families.
59. Our mission is to evangelize the lost and awaken the saved to live empowered lives by the Work of God and His Holy Spirit.
60. Nature has empowered us with such a strong force called mind.
More similar words: empower, empowerment, power, powerful, superpower, power cut, overpower, willpower, powerhouse, powerfully, solar power, power broker, balance of power, power of attorney, shower, lower, cower, tower, bower, flower, glower, towering, follower, tempo, glowering, sunflower, tower over, clock tower, were, whistleblower.