释义 |
sated, ppl. a.|ˈseɪtɪd| [f. sate v. + -ed1.] Glutted, satiated; cloyed or surfeited by indulgence of appetite.
1699Pomfret Love Triumphant 262 Who, when the sated Appetite is tir'd, Even loath the Thoughts of what they once admir'd. 1745Collins Ode to Lady 48 Till William seek the sad retreat, And bleeding at her sacred feet, Present the sated sword. 1762Goldsm. Cit. W. xcvii, The sated reader turns from it with a kind of literary nausea. 1855Longfellow Hiaw. viii. 217 Till Kayoshk, the sated sea⁓gulls, From their banquet rose with clamour. 1873Symonds Grk. Poets v. 129 To prevent the palling of so much luxury on sated senses. Hence ˈsatedness.
1847R. W. Hamilton Rew. & Punishm. i. 51 Do their sophisms quite convince them? Is all within at ease? Know they no satedness and disgust? |