puissance

See also: Puissance

English

WOTD – 9 November 2016
German equestrian Otto Ammermann and his horse Servus competing in a puissance event (sense 2) in Wilhelmshaven, Lower Saxony, Germany, in September 1965

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Anglo-Norman puissance, pusaunce, and other forms, from Old French puissant (powerful).

Pronunciation

Noun

puissance (countable and uncountable, plural puissances)

  1. Power, might or potency.
  2. (equestrianism) Often Puissance: the high-jump component of the sport of show jumping.
    • 1969, G. H. S. Webber, Show Jumping International, London: Evans Brothers; New York, N.Y.: Van Nostrand Reinhold, OCLC 34114, page 126:
      It was in Dublin that San Lucas scored his first success in what has become something of a speciality for him, the puissance.
    • 2011 April, Stuart Turner, Harnessing Horsepower: The Pat Moss Carlsson Story, Poundbury, Dorset: Veloce Publishing, →ISBN, page 23:
      Pat [Moss] then went to Oxford to qualify for the Horse of the Year Show, and Danny was fourth in the Puissance, an event with very high jumps.
    • 2013, Hilary M. Clayton; P. René van Weeren, “Performance in Equestrian Sports”, in Willem Back and Hilary M. Clayton, editors, Equine Locomotion, 2nd edition, Edinburgh; New York, N.Y.: Saunders, →ISBN, page 332:
      In a study of horses during a puissance competition that started at a height of 1.80 m and ended in the last round at 2.27 m, success was significantly positively correlated with the following variables at lift-off: vertical velocity of CM, height of CM, distance of CM from the fence; and was significantly negatively correlated with the distance of the leading hind limb to the CM.

Translations


French

Etymology

From Middle French puissance, derived from Old French puissant.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pɥi.sɑ̃s/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɑ̃s

Noun

puissance f (plural puissances)

  1. power (physical or figuratively)
  2. dominion (state within the British Empire)

Preposition

puissance

  1. (mathematics) to the power of
    Deux puissance quatre égale seize.

Further reading


Middle French

Etymology

From Old French puissance.

Noun

puissance f (plural puissances)

  1. power

Descendants


Old French

Alternative forms

  • poiessance
  • poixance
  • possance
  • poxance
  • poissance
  • poissanche
  • poussance
  • puissence
  • puissaunce
  • pusance
  • pusaunce
  • pussance
  • pussaunce

Etymology

From puissant, pussant.

Noun

puissance f (oblique plural puissances, nominative singular puissance, nominative plural puissances)

  1. power; ability; authority
  2. might; strength

Descendants

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.