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Discover LudwigThe phrase "assassin power" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing abilities, skills, or attributes associated with an assassin, often in fictional or gaming scenarios.
Example: "In the game, players can unlock various abilities, including the powerful assassin power that allows for stealthy takedowns."
Alternatives: "assassin skills" or "assassin abilities".
Exact(1)
On the day indignant supporters chanted, "Down with dictatorship", "The Berber language will survive" and, most notoriously, "Pouvoir Assassin!" (Power Assassin).
Similar(59)
That's the draw behind American Ultra, in which small-town stoner loser Mike Howell Jesse Eisenbergg) discovers that he's a sleeper agent with amazing assassin powers of destruction.
Ensnared in a web of revenge and conspiracy, the assassin embraces power at its most elemental, acting as the dividing line between life and death.
Several hundred youths shouted antigovernment slogans, some of them yelling "assassins in power" as the president stepped from his vehicle.
They're pitted against appropriately flamboyant villains, who range from two-bit gangsters and professional assassins to power-hungry nobles and the insidious Lord Hebi.
We get an assassin with special powers, lots of inept cops, a band of skinhead vampires, a woman tied to a bed, some black-ops guys, the FBI, CIA, a kitten and a corgi.
He called Gingrich a "character assassin" who came to power over "the bodies of Democratic leaders he'd charged with corruption".
Confounding this familiar deck are two wild cards: the Tribe, a close-knit guild of assassins with mysterious powers, including preternaturally acute hearing and the ability to put people to sleep with a glance; and the Hidden, a persecuted religious sect with great appeal to the downtrodden.
Mr. Zedillo was an accidental president, a mild-mannered economist thrust into power when assassins gunned down the PRI's chosen candidate.
The popularity of Jennifer Garner, star of television's "Alias," couldn't quite shake the poor reviews of Fox's comic-book adaptation "Elektra" (a spinoff from the 2003 "Daredevil," with Ben Affleck), about a female assassin who has special powers after she is brought back to life.
Does Angelina Jolie, starring in "Wanted" as an assassin, still have the drawing power to open a big movie?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com