Implied powers are powers that are perceived to be in place. Enumerated powers are powers that are specifically listed. An example of enumerated powers are the powers listed in Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution.
Because the US and the USSR were world powers. World powers are called world powers because they EFFECT the world.
The Allied Powers, Axis powers, and the Neutral Powers
To find the positive integers smaller than 1,000,000 that are powers of 2 but not powers of 8, we first determine the powers of 2 less than 1,000,000. The highest power of 2 less than 1,000,000 is (2^{19} = 524,288). The powers of 2 up to (2^{19}) are (2^0, 2^1, \ldots, 2^{19}), totaling 20 powers. The powers of 8 can be expressed as (2^{3k}), where (k) is a non-negative integer. The highest power of 8 below 1,000,000 is (8^{8} = 1,073,741,824), so we consider (8^0) to (8^6) (i.e., (2^{0}, 2^{3}, 2^{6}, 2^{9}, 2^{12}, 2^{15}, 2^{18})), giving us 7 powers of 8. Thus, the count of powers of 2 that are not powers of 8 is (20 - 7 = 13).
The Allied Powers and the Central Powers.
Axis Powers / Allied Powers .
The enumerated powers are powers that are given to Congress. They can be found in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution.
The Allied Powers emerged victorious in World War I.
residual (powers)
The ISBN of Earthly Powers is 0-09-143910-8.
During World War II, the Axis powers were defeated.
The Powers That Be - 1992 Charlerella 1-8 was released on: USA: 18 April 1992