The word 'spent' in this sense refers to being out of energy, or exhausted. 'Sated' refers to being satisfied. The phrase could be applied to someone who had just won a marathon or eaten at a very large buffet.
empty
The opposite of contented may be discontented, disgruntled, or unhappy.Where the meaning is sated or satisfied, the opposite would be unsatisfied, or unfulfilled.
It can be (satisfied customers). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to satisfy) and can be an adjective meaning sated or placated.
The close common word is satisfied (sated, content).
13th century: Old English saed 'sated, weary,' also 'weighty, dense,' of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zat and German satt, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin satis 'enough.' The original meaning was replaced in Middle English by the senses 'steadfast, firm' and 'serious, sober,' and later 'sorrowful.'
a disease that turns your penis into a vagina
No dessert for me, thanks; I'm quite sated.
sated or satiated in English = saciado, in Spanish
empty
The opposite of contented may be discontented, disgruntled, or unhappy.Where the meaning is sated or satisfied, the opposite would be unsatisfied, or unfulfilled.
It can be (satisfied customers). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to satisfy) and can be an adjective meaning sated or placated.
sate
The word content (kun-TENT) is an adjective, meaning satisfied. The word content (KON-tent) is a noun, meaning included materials.
stuffed
flourish, be satisfied or sated,
The root word for "sad" is likely the Old English word "sæd," meaning sated or full, which later evolved to mean "satisfied" and eventually "sorrowful" or "unhappy."
sated