0 to completely satisfy yourself or a need, especially with food or pleasure, so that you could not have any more: --
It is drying up partly because the post-war hunger for goods has been satiated, and partly because our prices are no longer right.
I hope we shall be able in the course of time to minister to him, and, perhaps, even to satiate him.
I am afraid there is no sign yet of their being satiated.
It is quite clear that these statistical people cannot be appeased; they cannot be satiated.
We are the leaders in this demand to-day, and we have an appetite which will not be satiated.
Smith (1975) suggested that fleshy pulp enhanced caching by temporarily satiating the scatterhoarder and, consequently, reducing predation.
Predators may be satiated by an abundance of seeds during mast years while they experience starvation during non-mast years with little or no availability of seeds.
Should one blame him for using historically satiated concepts to explain the formation and evolution of social institutions of the past?