"omnipotentiality" meaning in English

See omnipotentiality in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

IPA: /ˌɒmnipəˌtɛnʃiˈælɪti/ [Received-Pronunciation], /ˌɑmnipəˌtɛn(t)ʃiˈæləti/ [General-American], [-ɾi] [General-American] Audio: LL-Q1860 (eng)-Flame, not lame-omnipotentiality.wav Forms: omnipotentialities [plural]
Rhymes: -ælɪti Etymology: PIE word *pótis From omni- (prefix meaning ‘all’) + potentiality (“quality of having potential; (philosophy) capacity or possibility to be something”). Etymology templates: {{PIE word|en|pótis}} PIE word *pótis, {{root|en|ine-pro|*h₃ep-|*h₂el-}}, {{glossary|prefix}} prefix, {{affix|en|omni-|potentiality|pos1=prefix meaning ‘all’|t2=quality of having potential; (philosophy) capacity or possibility to be something}} omni- (prefix meaning ‘all’) + potentiality (“quality of having potential; (philosophy) capacity or possibility to be something”) Head templates: {{en-noun|-|+}} omnipotentiality (usually uncountable, plural omnipotentialities)
  1. (chiefly psychology, uncountable) The characteristic or feeling that anything is possible, and there are no limits on what may be achieved; (countable, rare) an instance of this. Tags: uncountable, usually Categories (topical): Psychology Synonyms: omni-potentiality Related terms: multipotentiality, omnipotence, omnipotency, omnipotential, plenipotence, pluripotentiality Translations (characteristic or feeling that anything is possible, and there are no limits on what may be achieved; instance of this): kaikkivoipaisuuden tunne (Finnish)

Inflected forms

Alternative forms

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          "ref": "1878, W[illia]m N[ixon] Haggard, “Recognition VI. The Essential Activity of the Divine Absolute Mind, […]”, in Creation, as a Divine Synthesis. A Contemplative Treatise concerning the Inter-relations between Deity and His Creation, as Discoverable by and to the Human Understanding, London: J. Ridsdale, […], →OCLC, page 36:",
          "text": "In the faculty of absolute concretive conception, the Divine Self-existent Mind was intrinsically possessed of the omnipotentiality to involve and evolve, an omnimultiple, omnivaried and omnimutable creation; and truly, with no eternal, objective, absolute cosmos to cognize, inevitable necessity required that Deity should first concretively conceive the varied subjects, He would fain contemplate.",
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          "ref": "1894 May, James A. Carmichael, “Life in the Cell. Comparative Morphanthrolopogy.”, in Egbert Guernsey, Alfred K. Hills, editors, The New York Medical Times, a Monthly Journal of Medicine, Surgery and the Collateral Sciences, volume XXII, number 5, New York, N.Y.: [s.n.], →OCLC, page 135, column 1:",
          "text": "We have already, and variously, accepted and maintained, as far as in us lay the power, as our \"shibboleth\" and \"coign of vantage,\" the omni-potentiality of cell force in making life appear where life was not, and in forming and developing each and every vital entity, from the lowest to the highest, and adapting them to the conditions by which they are surrounded, […]",
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          "ref": "1970 December 2 (date delivered), Kenneth Eric Nelson, witness, “Statement of Maj. Kenneth Eric Nelson, M.D., Chief, Psychiatric Consultation Service, Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco, Calif., Department of the Navy”, in Drug and Alcohol Abuse in the Military: Hearings before the Special Subcommittee on Alcoholism and Narcotics of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, United States Senate, Ninety-first Congress, Second Session on Examination of Drug Abuse and Alcoholism in the Armed Forces […], Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, published 1971, →OCLC, page 696:",
          "text": "In this maturational process, one has to give up the many comforts of dependency, and many fantasies about one's omni-potentiality; for to commit one's self to something necessarily means to surrender something else.",
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          "ref": "1981, David L. Gutmann, “Psychoanalysis and Aging: A Developmental View”, in Stanley I. Greenspan, George H. Pollock, editors, The Course of Life: Psychoanalytic Contributions toward Understanding Personality Development (DHHS Publication; number (ADM) 81-1000), volume III (Adulthood and the Aging Process), Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office [for the] Mental Health Study Center, Division of Mental Health Service Programs, National Institute of Mental Health; Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Services Administration, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, →OCLC, page 501:",
          "text": "As such, the infant supports the illusion of omnipotentiality and thus becomes a fit vehicle for whatever splitoff and grandiose fantasies the father might still entertain for himself.",
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          "ref": "2005, Thomas E. Brown, “Adulthood: Managing Responsibilities, Finding a Niche”, in Attention Deficit Disorder: The Unfocused Mind in Children and Adults (Yale University Press Health & Wellness), New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 146:",
          "text": "The young man's comment \"I've always had difficulty making choices\" reflects a problem with \"omnipotentiality\"—a fantasy-based attitude, common among adolescents, that all things are possible, all choices are open. Usually this attitude is dispelled during mid- to late adolescence as most individuals are forced to confront the reality that some doors are not open to them.",
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          "ref": "2015, Kristof K. P. Vanhoutte, “(All) Politics (are) from the Devil: Taking [Giorgio] Agamben to Hell (and Back?)”, in Benjamin W. McCraw, Robert Arp, editors, The Concept of Hell, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN:",
          "text": "Power, through its perversion of means and ends, not only considers omnipotence the greatest perfection, but, in its perverted form of greatest perfection, aims at the culmination of all potentialities – omni-potentialities[…]. This means that, at the heights of its omnipotence, power claims that all is potentially possible, but only as long as one does not attempt to put it (all potentialities) into action.",
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          "text": "For some, the manic \"omnipotentialities\" of adolescence and the idealistic optimism of youth harshly juxtapose with an ego-depleting nostalgic focus on decline, irreversible losses, missed opportunities, and a negative and unfavorable review of the past which generates deep regret and a perverse failure of optimism[…]",
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          "word": "omnipotency"
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          "word": "omnipotential"
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          "word": "kaikkivoipaisuuden tunne"
        }
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          "ref": "1878, W[illia]m N[ixon] Haggard, “Recognition VI. The Essential Activity of the Divine Absolute Mind, […]”, in Creation, as a Divine Synthesis. A Contemplative Treatise concerning the Inter-relations between Deity and His Creation, as Discoverable by and to the Human Understanding, London: J. Ridsdale, […], →OCLC, page 36:",
          "text": "In the faculty of absolute concretive conception, the Divine Self-existent Mind was intrinsically possessed of the omnipotentiality to involve and evolve, an omnimultiple, omnivaried and omnimutable creation; and truly, with no eternal, objective, absolute cosmos to cognize, inevitable necessity required that Deity should first concretively conceive the varied subjects, He would fain contemplate.",
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          "ref": "1894 May, James A. Carmichael, “Life in the Cell. Comparative Morphanthrolopogy.”, in Egbert Guernsey, Alfred K. Hills, editors, The New York Medical Times, a Monthly Journal of Medicine, Surgery and the Collateral Sciences, volume XXII, number 5, New York, N.Y.: [s.n.], →OCLC, page 135, column 1:",
          "text": "We have already, and variously, accepted and maintained, as far as in us lay the power, as our \"shibboleth\" and \"coign of vantage,\" the omni-potentiality of cell force in making life appear where life was not, and in forming and developing each and every vital entity, from the lowest to the highest, and adapting them to the conditions by which they are surrounded, […]",
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          "ref": "1970 December 2 (date delivered), Kenneth Eric Nelson, witness, “Statement of Maj. Kenneth Eric Nelson, M.D., Chief, Psychiatric Consultation Service, Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco, Calif., Department of the Navy”, in Drug and Alcohol Abuse in the Military: Hearings before the Special Subcommittee on Alcoholism and Narcotics of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, United States Senate, Ninety-first Congress, Second Session on Examination of Drug Abuse and Alcoholism in the Armed Forces […], Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, published 1971, →OCLC, page 696:",
          "text": "In this maturational process, one has to give up the many comforts of dependency, and many fantasies about one's omni-potentiality; for to commit one's self to something necessarily means to surrender something else.",
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          "text": "As such, the infant supports the illusion of omnipotentiality and thus becomes a fit vehicle for whatever splitoff and grandiose fantasies the father might still entertain for himself.",
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          "text": "The young man's comment \"I've always had difficulty making choices\" reflects a problem with \"omnipotentiality\"—a fantasy-based attitude, common among adolescents, that all things are possible, all choices are open. Usually this attitude is dispelled during mid- to late adolescence as most individuals are forced to confront the reality that some doors are not open to them.",
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          "text": "Power, through its perversion of means and ends, not only considers omnipotence the greatest perfection, but, in its perverted form of greatest perfection, aims at the culmination of all potentialities – omni-potentialities[…]. This means that, at the heights of its omnipotence, power claims that all is potentially possible, but only as long as one does not attempt to put it (all potentialities) into action.",
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          "text": "For some, the manic \"omnipotentialities\" of adolescence and the idealistic optimism of youth harshly juxtapose with an ego-depleting nostalgic focus on decline, irreversible losses, missed opportunities, and a negative and unfavorable review of the past which generates deep regret and a perverse failure of optimism[…]",
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      "rhymes": "-ælɪti"
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      "word": "omni-potentiality"
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      "code": "fi",
      "lang": "Finnish",
      "sense": "characteristic or feeling that anything is possible, and there are no limits on what may be achieved; instance of this",
      "word": "kaikkivoipaisuuden tunne"
    }
  ],
  "word": "omnipotentiality"
}

Download raw JSONL data for omnipotentiality meaning in English (8.9kB)


This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2025-01-20 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2025-01-01 using wiktextract (ee63ee9 and 4230888). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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