If it inhabits you, you know it as a never-sated occupier that gets you up early and puts you to bed late just trying to do a little bit more every day.
Bethenny Frankel Reveals Why She’s an ‘Animal’|Eugene Robinson|September 2, 2020|Ozy
It’s hard to imagine how much housing you’d really need to sate demand for New York.
Why Rent Control Doesn’t Work (Ep. 373 Rebroadcast)|Stephen J. Dubner|March 12, 2020|Freakonomics
If Kentucky gets by Kansas State, I think Wichita Sate can get bounced in the second round.
ESPN’s Bracket Champion Shares His March Madness Secrets|Ben Teitelbaum|March 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Verdict: Not that original, but it will sate the appetite of vampire-starved fans.
Fall-Winter TV Preview: Snap Judgments of 2013–14’s New Shows|Jace Lacob, Kevin Fallon|July 16, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Why wait a week to watch another episode when there are 108 more available and you can sate your hunger by just clicking away?
‘House of Cards’: Should You Binge-Watch Netflix’s Political Drama?|Jace Lacob|February 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
We sate down by the road-side, and then went to Wytheburn water.
Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth, Vol. I (of 2)|Dorothy Wordsworth
The giant grew weary of his burden, and sate down on the big stone to rest.
English Fairy Tales|Flora Annie Steel
Then they rode into the Dale, and had a hearty welcome; there Kettle of the Mark met them, and there they sate two nights.
The story of Burnt Njal|Anonymous
Wrote to William after dinner, worked in the garden, sate in the evening under the trees.
Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth, Vol. I (of 2)|Dorothy Wordsworth
Nicias, poor honest man, might just as well have sate still; his speaking did but little good.
The Miscellaneous Writings and Speeches of Lord Macaulay, Vol. 1 (of 4)|Thomas Babington Macaulay
British Dictionary definitions for sate (1 of 2)
sate1
/ (seɪt) /
verb(tr)
to satisfy (a desire or appetite) fully
to supply beyond capacity or desire
Word Origin for sate
Old English sadian; related to Old High German satōn; see sad, satiate