Definition of Sated

1. Adjective. In a state of complete and thorough satisfaction. ¹

2. Adjective. quelled of thirst or hunger. ¹

3. Verb. (simple past of sate) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Sated

1. sate [v] - See also: sate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Sated

satara
sataras
satavaptan
satay
satays
satchel
satcheled
satchelful
satchelfuls
satchelled
satchels
satchelsful
satcomms
satcoms
sate
sated (current term)
sateen
sateens
sateless
satelles
satellite
satellite-rich heterochromatin
satellite DNA
satellite RNA
satellite TV
satellite abscess
satellite campus
satellite cell
satellite cell of skeletal muscle
satellite cells

Literary usage of Sated

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Essays on Chivalry, Romance, and the Drama by Walter Scott (1887)
"On the other hand, the men, easily and early sated with indulgencies, ... The sated lover,—and perhaps it is the most brutal part of humanity,—is soon ..."

2. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"Echoes thou didst thy noble verses name, The Legacy thou leav'st to time and fame. Not so: О sated, modern mind, rejoice! Here sound no echoes, ..."

3. Students Hebrew and Chaldee Dictionary to the Old Testament by Alexander Harkavy (1914)
"... INCH the pastures of the wilderness have become green Jo.2,22. ... s weird is sated with fat Is. 34,6. Hiph. trinn (fut. ..."

4. The Bookman (1905)
"... after an interval of separation, thrown herself into the arms of the erst haughty aristocrat) the public is sated and sent home smiling a sticky smile ..."

5. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1823)
"... an sated by giving him a remedy against the fence which he has committed, furnishes' pose an injunction granted upon a doubt- the plaintiff's claim, ..."

6. The Life of Lorenzo De' Medici, Called the Magnificent by William Roscoe (1795)
"found amongst the the church of S. sated, in the attitude two emblematical figures learned professor who was Nos anno ..."

7. Essays on Chivalry, Romance, and the Drama by Walter Scott (1887)
"On the other hand, the men, easily and early sated with indulgencies, ... The sated lover,—and perhaps it is the most brutal part of humanity,—is soon ..."

8. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"Echoes thou didst thy noble verses name, The Legacy thou leav'st to time and fame. Not so: О sated, modern mind, rejoice! Here sound no echoes, ..."

9. Students Hebrew and Chaldee Dictionary to the Old Testament by Alexander Harkavy (1914)
"... INCH the pastures of the wilderness have become green Jo.2,22. ... s weird is sated with fat Is. 34,6. Hiph. trinn (fut. ..."

10. The Bookman (1905)
"... after an interval of separation, thrown herself into the arms of the erst haughty aristocrat) the public is sated and sent home smiling a sticky smile ..."

11. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1823)
"... an sated by giving him a remedy against the fence which he has committed, furnishes' pose an injunction granted upon a doubt- the plaintiff's claim, ..."

12. The Life of Lorenzo De' Medici, Called the Magnificent by William Roscoe (1795)
"found amongst the the church of S. sated, in the attitude two emblematical figures learned professor who was Nos anno ..."

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