saté

listen to the pronunciation of saté
English - Turkish
English - English
A popular dish made from small pieces of meat or fish grilled on a skewer and served with a spicy peanut sauce, originating from Indonesia and Malaysia
{i} southeast Asian dish of strips of marinated seafood or meat or poultry grilled on skewers and dipped in peanut sauce
sate
Simple past of sit
sate
To satisfy; fill up

And still the hours passed, and at last I knew by the glimmer of light in the tomb above that the sun had risen again, and a maddening thirst had hold of me. And then I thought of all the barrels piled up in the vault and of the liquor that they held; and stuck not because 'twas spirit, for I would scarce have paused to sate that thirst even with molten lead.

sate
satay
sate
{v} to glut, saturate, fill, satisfy
sate
A past tense of sit
sate
To satisfy the desire or appetite of; to satiate; to glut; to surfeit
sate
fill to satisfaction; "I am sated"
sate
of Sit
sate
{f} satisfy an appetite or desire; fill completely, gorge, glut
sated
quelled of thirst or hunger
sated
Simple past of sate
sated
In a state of complete and thorough satisfaction
sated
Past tense of to sate
sated
{s} having had more than enough of something than one can easily drink or eat at one time; surfeited
sated
fed beyond capacity or desire
sated
If you are sated with something, you have had more of it than you can enjoy at one time. children happily sated with ice cream. feeling that you have had enough or too much of something, especially food or pleasure = full
sated
in a state of complete satisfaction
sates
plural of sate
sating
present participle of sate
saté

    Hyphenation

    sate

    Turkish pronunciation

    seyt

    Pronunciation

    /ˈsāt/ /ˈseɪt/

    Etymology

    () From Early Modern English sate, variant of sade (“to satiate, satisfy”), from Middle English saden (“to satisfy, become satiated”), from Old English sadian (“to satiate”) from Proto-Germanic *sadōnan (“to satiate”) from Proto-Germanic base *sadiz, *sadaz, *sōþ- (“sated”) from Proto-Indo-European *sā- (“to satiate, be satisfied”). Akin to Old English sæd (“sated, full”), Old Saxon sad, Old Dutch sad, Old High German sat (German satt (“full”)), Old Norse saðr (“sated, full”), Gothic (saþs, “full, sated”), Gothic (sōþa, “satisfaction”). More at sad.

    Tenses

    sates, sating, sated
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