sated
31sad — [OE] Originally, to feel sad was to feel that one had had ‘enough’. For the word comes ultimately from the same Indo European base that produced English satisfy and saturate. By the time it reached English (via a prehistoric Germanic *sathaz)… …
32satiate — [16] Like satisfy, satiate comes from Latin satis ‘enough’, a descendant of the same Indo European base that produced English sad and sated. Satis formed the basis of a verb satiāre ‘give enough or too much’, which was originally taken over by… …
33satisfy — [15] Etymologically, satisfy means ‘make enough’. It comes, via Old French satisfier, from Latin satisfacere ‘satisfy, content’, a compound verb formed from satis ‘enough’ (a relative of English sad, sated, and saturate, and source of English… …
34ἁψικόρως — ἁψίκορος quickly sated adverbial ἁψίκορος quickly sated masc/fem acc pl (doric) …
35ἁψίκορον — ἁψίκορος quickly sated masc/fem acc sg ἁψίκορος quickly sated neut nom/voc/acc sg …
36empty — [adj1] containing nothing abandoned, bare, barren, blank, clear, dead, deflated, depleted, desert, deserted, desolate, despoiled, destitute, devoid, dry, evacuated, exhausted, forsaken, godforsaken*, hollow, lacking, stark, unfilled, unfurnished …
37full — [adj1] brimming, filled abounding, abundant, adequate, awash, big, bounteous, brimful, burdened, bursting, chockablock, chock full, competent, complete, crammed, crowded, entire, extravagant, glutted, gorged, imbued, impregnated, intact, jammed,… …
38sad — [OE] Originally, to feel sad was to feel that one had had ‘enough’. For the word comes ultimately from the same Indo European base that produced English satisfy and saturate. By the time it reached English (via a prehistoric Germanic *sathaz)… …
39satiate — [16] Like satisfy, satiate comes from Latin satis ‘enough’, a descendant of the same Indo European base that produced English sad and sated. Satis formed the basis of a verb satiāre ‘give enough or too much’, which was originally taken over by… …
40satisfy — [15] Etymologically, satisfy means ‘make enough’. It comes, via Old French satisfier, from Latin satisfacere ‘satisfy, content’, a compound verb formed from satis ‘enough’ (a relative of English sad, sated, and saturate, and source of English… …