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satt
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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Faroese
Pronunciation
Adjective
satt
Adverb
satt
German
Etymology
From Middle High German sat, from Old High German sat, from Proto-West Germanic *sad, from Proto-Germanic *sadaz, from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂-. Compare Dutch zat, English sad, Danish sat.
Pronunciation
Adjective
satt (strong nominative masculine singular satter, comparative satter, superlative am sattesten)
- not hungry, satiated, full, done
- Willst du noch was? − Nein danke, ich bin satt.
- Do you want some more? – No thanks, I'm done.
- fed up, sick of (see usage notes)
- Ich habe deinen Quatsch satt!
- I'm sick of your nonsense!
- {{quote-text|de|year=1966|author=w:Otfried Preußler|title=Das kleine Gespenst
- Eine halbe Woche lang habe ich diesen Höllenlärm über mich ergehen lassen, dann bekam ich es satt!“
- For half a week I let this hellish noise go on above me, and then I got fed up with it!
- full, ample
- 2010, Der Spiegel, number 33/2010, page 71:
- Sogar die Zahl der Millionäre wuchs 2009 um satte 17 Prozent.
- Even the number of millionaires grew in 2009 by a full 17 percent.
Usage notes
- common in speech and writing: es/etwas/ihn satt haben, literary: es/etwas satt sein, dated: ihn satt sein, archaic: einer Sache/seiner satt sein
- According to Ngram Viewer, the idiomatic expression with the sense "fed up" has been used much more with haben and the accusative (ich habe es satt) than with sein and the accusative (ich bin es satt) since about 1910. Even rarer is use with sein and the genitive (ich bin dieser Sache satt / ich bin seiner satt), which was common in the 1800s and earlier and which is marked as literary by the Duden and DWDS but is now very rare even in books (except in the expression des Lebens satt sein, for example, which is used in the Bible and probably therefore continues to be used in books, though das Leben satt sein has become as common in books since about 1890).
Declension
Positive forms of satt
Comparative forms of satt
Superlative forms of satt
Further reading
- “satt” in Duden online
- “satt” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- Friedrich Kluge (1883), “satt”, in John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891
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Icelandic
Adjective
satt
- inflection of sannur:
Norwegian Bokmål
Verb
satt
- simple past of sitte
- past participle of sette
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology 1
Verb
satt
Etymology 2
From Old Norse satt, neuter of saðr, sannr. Alternative form of sant.
Pronunciation
Adjective
satt
References
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Old Norse
Adjective
satt
Swedish
Etymology
Probably, at least partially, modeled after German gesetzt, past participle of setzen (“to sit”); otherwise from the native past participle of sätta (“to sit”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
satt (not comparable)
Declension
1 The indefinite superlative forms are only used in the predicative.
2 Dated or archaic.
3 Only used, optionally, to refer to things whose natural gender is masculine.
Synonyms
Participle
satt
- past participle of sätta
Verb
satt
- past indicative of sitta
- supine of sätta
- (nonstandard, in some cases) supine of sitta
- Synonym: suttit (standard)
- Det hade satt fint med en korv.
- It would've been nice with a hot dog.
Anagrams
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