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Discover LudwigThe phrase "sated with" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a person or thing that has been satisfied or filled to the point of no longer wanting or needing any more. For example, "After gorging on a delicious cake, he was sated with sweetness."
Exact(60)
We left, sated, with plans to return.
It was all delicious, and we leaned back sated with brown.
I came out dizzy and sated with the phantom warmth of my binge.
"We launched ShortList because we felt men had become sated with all that," says Hilton.
It's pearls before a black tie crowd sated with food and wine who don't like poetry.
New Yorkers strode by like tigers and gazelles, sated with self-satisfaction and hungry for conquest.
A pent-up desire for Western gewgaws, long denied by the strait-laced Kremlin, was sated with gusto.
Although I was sated with food and wine, I insisted on ordering tea, if only to satisfy my curiosity.
The obvious risk is that the movie, sated with such benevolence, will doze off into the winsome or the cute.
Most tourists complete the climb by elephant, but we were sated with our camel ride of a few days previous.
In Florence, visitors sated with Renaissance masterpieces can turn to the new Gucci Museo, which has been a huge attraction since opening in September.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com