SATE
No. Full is an adjective. The adverb form is "fully."
No, of course it isn't. I respectfully suggest that you grow up and use the Bible for its real purpose and not to satisfy a childish tittilation.
The word suffice means get by, satisfy, answer, avail, content, do, meet, make the grade, or hit the spot. Some antonyms for the word suffice include displease, miss, refuse, or dissatisfy.
There is no possible value of x that will satisfy the given equation. There is no possible value of x that will satisfy the given equation. There is no possible value of x that will satisfy the given equation. There is no possible value of x that will satisfy the given equation.
No, carefully is not a compound word because fully is an adjective, while care is a noun. A compound word must have two nouns, for example, hand and bag, handbag.
Sate means to satisfy or complete. The word originated in the late 1500s to early 1600s and comes from Old English. A familiar word similar to this one is satiate.
The likely word is society (a noun meaning culture, or a population group).Another likely word is satiate, (a verb meaning to satisfy fully or to excess).
sate -- it is the verb base of satisfy...
Fulfilled, Pleased. Content.
Not even the huge buffet could satisfy his hunger.
The root word in "satisfied" is "satisfy."
No. It really needs to be about 6 inches or more
The word "satisfy" means to meet the expectations or desires of something. Considering it means to do something, "satisfy" is a verb.
SATISFIED
Satiate.
satisfy
The prefix is "un" for the word unsatisfied