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Definitions

insatiate

[in-sey-shee-it] / ɪnˈseɪ ʃi ɪt /






Example Sentences

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Then on to the insatiate facts: one family in five had $3,000 to spend in 1932, the average weekly wage of factory workers was $16.21, the cost of a Chevy was $445, etc.

From Time Magazine Archive

This year, which attests their insatiate love of wealth and power, quenches the flame upon the altar.

From Life Without and Life Within or, Reviews, Narratives, Essays, and poems. by Fuller, Margaret

Then, the Bear of the North, that insatiate beast, Has been check’d in his wily attempts on the East; And his further insidious advances forbidden By the broadsword of Auckland, which warns him from Eden.

From A History of the Cries of London Ancient and Modern by Hindley, Charles

The insatiate colonists did not stop: many of the mines lay unproductive for want of labourers, and they bent their efforts to the supplying this defect.

From History of the Buccaneers of America by Burney, James

Her mind, insatiate as a fallow, unfertilised field, absorbed whatever was thrown upon it.

From The Song of Songs by Sudermann, Hermann




Vocabulary lists containing insatiate