satiated
1satiated — satiated; un·satiated; …
2satiated — index full, replete Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
3Satiated — Satiate Sa ti*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Satiated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Satiating}.] 1. To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to feed to the full; to furnish enjoyment to, to the extent of desire; to sate; as, to satiate appetite or sense. [1913… …
4satiated — adjective supplied (especially fed) to satisfaction • Syn: ↑satiate • Ant: ↑insatiate (for: ↑satiate) • Similar to: ↑jaded, ↑satiable, ↑ …
5satiated — /say shee ay tid/, adj. satisfied, as one s appetite or desire, to the point of boredom. [1685 95; SATIATE + ED2] * * * …
6satiated — adjective Pleasantly satisfied or full, as with food. See Also: satiate, satiation …
7satiated — Synonyms and related words: SRO, allayed, blase, bloated, brimful, brimming, bulging, bursting, capacity, chock full, choked, chuck full, cloyed, congested, cram full, crammed, crowded, disgusted, dispirited, distended, drenched, engorged, farci …
8satiated — adj. filled to satiety, saturated, gratified, glutted sa·ti·ate || seɪʃɪeɪt v. fully satisfy a desire or appetite; gorge, overfill, glut, sate adj. filled to satiety, saturated, gratified, glutted …
9satiated — Ho olawa ana; mā ona piha, ana, kenakena, okukuli (with food); aikena (to the point of sickness) …
10full stomach — satiated, the feeling after one eats; accumulation of anger …
11sā-, sǝ- — sā , sǝ English meaning: satiated Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘satt; sättigen” Material: O.Ind. a si n vá , ásinvan “unersättlich” (places ein Praes. *sǝ néu mi, *sǝ nu̯ ō ahead); Arm. at ok” “full, ausgewachsen”; hač, hačoy “zufrieden” …
12Satiety — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Satiety >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 satiety satiety satisfaction saturation repletion glut surfeit Sgm: N 1 cloyment cloyment satiation Sgm: N 1 weariness weariness &c. 841 …
13Satiate — Sa ti*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Satiated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Satiating}.] 1. To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to feed to the full; to furnish enjoyment to, to the extent of desire; to sate; as, to satiate appetite or sense. [1913 Webster]… …
14Satiating — Satiate Sa ti*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Satiated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Satiating}.] 1. To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to feed to the full; to furnish enjoyment to, to the extent of desire; to sate; as, to satiate appetite or sense. [1913… …
15Motivating operation — Motivating operations or establishing operations, are a concept in behaviorism involving the effectiveness of consequences in operant conditioning. They explain why a person wants or does not want something and why they act or do not act in a… …
16satiate — [[t]se͟ɪʃieɪt[/t]] satiates, satiating, satiated VERB If something such as food or pleasure satiates you, you have all that you need or all that you want of it, often so much that you become tired of it. [FORMAL] [V n] There is usually enough… …
17κατακορῆ — κατακορής satiated neut nom/voc/acc pl (attic epic doric) κατακορής satiated masc/fem/neut nom/voc/acc dual (doric aeolic) κατακορής satiated masc/fem acc sg (attic epic doric) …
18κατακορέστερον — κατακορής satiated adverbial comp κατακορής satiated masc acc comp sg κατακορής satiated neut nom/voc/acc comp sg …
19sa|ti|ate — «verb. SAY shee ayt; adjective. SAY shee iht, ayt», verb, at|ed, at|ing, adjective. –v.t. 1. to feed fully; satisfy fully. 2. to weary or disgust with too much; supply with too much; glut; cloy: »She was so satiated with banan …
20Intermediate zone — The Intermediate zone, a term found in Sri Aurobindo s philosophy, refers to what is described as a spiritually dangerous and misleading transitional spiritual and pseudospiritual region between the ordinary consciousness of the outer being and… …