satchel 
I make a doubt whether I had the same identical in- 
dividually numerical Body when I carried a Calf-leather 
Sachel to School in Hereford, as when I wore a Lambskin 
Hood in Oxford. llumll, Letters, I. i. 81. 
sate 1 (sat). An obsolete or archaic preterit of 
Sit. 
sate- (sat), r. /. ; pret. and pp. sated, ppr. satin;/. 
[IrregX lj.*o <(, satisfy, satiate, appar. resting 
in part on the L. sat for satis, sufficient : sec sati- 
ate, satisfy.] To fill full ; glut ; surfeit : satiate. 
When she is sated with his body, she will find the error of 
her choice. Shak., Othello, i. 3. 35. 
The sated reader turns from it [the subject] with a kind 
of literary nausea. Goldsmith, Citizen of the World, xcvii. 
For never power 
Can sate the hungry soul beyond an hour. 
Lowll, Legend of Brittany, ii. 5. 
= Syn, Surfeit, etc. (see satisfy), glut, gorge, 
sateen (sa-ten'),. [Also satteen ; <F.asif*,w- 
tine, < satin, satin: see satin."] 1. A fabric hav- 
ing a glossy surface, so called from its resem- 
blance to satin; specifically, a kind of worsted 
goods much used for linings. 2. A cotton fab- 
ric, (o) A thick and strong fabric resembling jean, used 
for corsets, women's shoes etc. (6) A thin textile resem- 
bling Indian silk, printed in colors for dresses. Also 
spelled mtine. Amazon sateen, sateen made especially 
for women's riding-habits. 
sateless (sat'les). . [< sate? + -less.'] Insatia- 
ble; that cannot be sated or satisfied. [Rare.] 
His very crimes attest his dignity : 
satin-de-laine 
satiety (sa-ti'e-ti), n. [Formerly also xni-ii-lii; 
< OF. xatii-te. xn-'ieti-il, F. satii : te = Pr. Sp. sucii - 
" = Pg. sacitdade = It. sazieta, < L. satie- 
ta(t-)x, sufficiency, abundance, satiety, < 
.iHx, enough, sufficient: see satiate, sat- 
'*/!/] It. Fullness; sufficiency. [Kare.] 
This, of himselfe all Fulncsse, all Satietie, 
Is then the sole Incomprehensible Deitie. 
Heyu'nod, Hierarchy of Angels, p. 6S. 
2. A glutted or cloyed state or condition ; an 
excess of gratification which excites loathing; 
gratification to the full or beyond natural de- 
sire ; surfeit. 
Of knowledge there is no satiety, but satisfaction and 
appetite are perpetually interchangeable. 
Bacon, Advancement of Learning, i. 100. 
The strength of delight is in Its seldoraness or rarity 
and sting in its satiety. Sir T. Browne, Christ. Jlor., ii. 1. 
Thou lovest, but ne'er knew love's sad satiety. 
Shelley, To a Skylark. 
= Syn. 2. Repletion, cloyment, glut. See satisfy. 
satin (sat'in). . and a. [Early mod. E. also 
xnttin, satten; < ME. satin, satync (= D. satiju 
Satellite-sphinx (miamftlus salellitia), natural size (left pair of = Sw. Satin), < OF. Satin, alSO SOIH. F. Satin, 
wings omitted). oofi,. t> ,.*;. rm. u ,^j.i_ T.L -'ill 
A follower; particularly, a subservient or ob- 
sequious follower or attendant ; a subordinate 
wings 
satellite-sphinx (sat'e-lit-sfingks),M. PhiUtm- 
IH-IH.I sutellitid, a large and handsome hawk- 
moth whose larva feeds upon the vine, 
satellite-vein (sat'e-lit-van), n. A vein accom- 
panying an artery. There are frequently two 
such veins to one artery, each of which is called 
rt-na dimes. 
satelli- 
an atten- 
.] Per- 
taining to or having the character of a satellite. 
Their satettitious attendance, their revolutions about the 
sun. G. Cheyne, Philosophical Principles. 
Satellite, one retained to guard a man's person; a Yeo- Satellitium (sat-e-lish'i-um). n. [< LL. satel- 
litium, an escort, guard, < L. safeties, an atten- 
dant : see satellite.] An escort; guard; accom- 
paniment. 
His horoscope is b, having in it a satellitium of 6 of the 
7 planets. It is a maxime in astrology that a native that 
hath a satellitium in his ascendent proves more eminent 
in his life than ordinary. Aubrey, Lives, Thomas Hobbes. 
man of the Guard ; a Sergeant, Catchpoll. 
Blount, Glossographia (ed. 167U). 
But the petty princes and their satellites should be 
brought to market ; not one of them should have a span 
of earth, or a vest, or a carcass of his own. 
Landnr, Marcus Tullius and Quinctus Cicero. 
The fault lies not so much in human nature as in the 
satellites of Power. /. V Israeli, Curios, of Lit., I. 173. 
Bedford, with his silver kettle, and his buttony satellite, Saterdayt, . An obsolete form of Saturday. 
presently brought in this refection [the tea]. Sathan, Sathanast, H. See Satan. 
Thackeray, Level the Widower, Iv. sati, w. Same as suttee. 
2. An attendant moon ; a small planet revolv- satiability (sa-shia-bil'j-ti), n. [< satiable + 
ing round a larger one; a secondary planet, -ity (see -bility).] "The "character of being sa- 
tiable, or the fact of being satisfied. 
satiable (sa'shia-bl), a. [< sati(ate) + -able.] 
Capable of being satiated or satisfied, 
satiableness (sa'shia-bl-nes), n. Same as sa- 
tiability. 
satiate (sa'shiat), c. t. ; pret. and pp. satiated, 
The earth has one satellite, the moon ; Neptune is known 
to be accompanied by one ; Mars by two ; " 
ellites. 
Or ask of yonder argent fields above 
Why Jove's satellites are less than Jove. 
Pope, Essay on Man, i 
We can spare 
The splendour of your lamps: they but eclipse 
Our softer satellite. Coieper, Task, i. 7(i. 
The others may be regarded merely as satellites, revolv- 
ing round some one or other of these superior powers. 
Prencott, Ferd. and Isa., i. 20. 
3. In ijeoin., a straight line bearing the fol- 
lowing relation to another straight line. The 
satellite (also called the satellite line) of a given straight 
line, with reference to a given cubic curve in whose 
plane the straight line lies, is the straight line joining 
the three points at which the three tangents to the 
curve at the points of intersection of the first straight 
line with it again cut the curve. This is the definition 
of Cayley (Phil. Trans., 1857, p. 416), but it has the incon- 
sat, satis, sufficient, satiir, full ; akin to sad: see 
sad, sate*, satisfy.] 1. To satisfy; feed or 
nourish to the full; sate. 
O ! what not sell wee beer, 
Sithence, to *itiut our Gold-thirsty gall, 
We sell our selues, our very soules and ally 
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartan's Weeks, i. 5. 
2. To fill beyond natural desire; surfeit; fill 
to repletion. 
He may be satiated, but not satisfied. Narrit. 
3f. To saturate. See saturate. 
Why does not salt of tartar draw more water out of the 
air, . . . but for want of attractive force 
with water? 
satin, = Pg. setim = Olt. setino, satin, It., silk 
hangings, < ML. setinus, also (after OF.) sati- 
nus, satininn, satin (cf. OF. sathenin = Olt. 
xetinino, satin), prop, (as in Olt. setino) adj., of 
silk, < seta (> It. seta = Sp. Pg. seda = F. soie 
;, MHG. side, G. seide = Olr. sita), 
of L. seta, sseta, a bristle, 
something made of hair, as a 
pencil, etc.: see seta.] I. n. A silk material 
of which the surface is very glossy, and the 
back not as lustrous as the face. The high luster 
of the surface is produced partly by the quality of the silk, 
partly by the weaving, and partly by dressing with hot 
rollers. Satins are sometimes figured, and sometimes the 
background of a raised velvet is satin, so that the stuff 
may be called a satin with a velvet pattern, or more gen- 
erally velvet with satin ground. 
Satyne, clothe of sylkc. Satinum. 
Prompt. Pan., p. 441. 
We did see 
Damask and sotting, 
And velvet full fair. 
Winning of Coles (Child's Ballads, VII. 127). 
What said Master Dombledon about the satin for my 
short cloak and my slops? Shot., 2 Hen. IV., I. 2. 84. 
Aureate satin 1 , a rich silk stuff. 
Their hosen being of riche gold satten called aureate 
satten. Hall, Henry VIII., quoted by Planchg. 
Cuttanee satin, a satin of Indian origin, with a cotton 
back, strong and durable. Denmark satin, a coarse 
worsted stuff with a smooth surface. Double satin de 
Lyon, a satin in which both faces are satin. Duchesse 
satin, a satin of good quality, strong and durable, and 
usually in black or plain colors without pattern. Farm- 
er's satin, a durable material of wool, or cotton and wool, 
having a satin-like surface. It is used especially for lin- 
ings. Satin d'Amerique, a name given to a cloth made 
of the flber of the American agave or aloe. It is used espe- 
ery. Satin de Bruges, a fabric of silk 
: a smooth and satin-like surface: used 
, tery. Satin deLyon.akind of satin the 
back of which is ribbed instead of smooth. Satin mer- 
veilleux, a twilled silk fabric with a satin finish. Turk 
satin, Turk's satin, a soft silk material with a glossy 
surface and twilled back. It is used for men's waistcoats 
and women's evening shoes, and for lining fur garments. 
II. a. 1. Made of satin: as, a satin dress. 
2. Of the nature of satin ; pertaining to or re- 
sembling satin ; having a satin surface. 
There was a wayward breeze, a desultory satin rustle, in 
the vine-leaves. The Century, XXXVIII. 894. 
Satin bower-bird, Ptilonorhynchus Roloserieeus. See cut 
under oou-er-bird. Satin embroidery, embroidery in 
-.=,- uu, u, u , e ^";'- 8t ' tch : a . nie , r tJS bb 5 e ^ tlo 5' but ' re i entl y usei1 -- 
after it is satiated Satin figure, in textile fabrics, decoration by means of a 
Newton Pattern having a smooth or satiny surface relieved upon 
the applications of primary and satellite in the theory of 
plane cubics. In the diagram, ABC is the satellite line. 
with water? Newton Pattern having a smooth or satiny surface relieved upon 
a ground without gloss. Satin Jean. See jean. 
=Sjm. 2. Surfeit, etc. (see satisfy); suffice overfill, glut, gatia (sat'in), v. t. [< F. satiner, press so as to 
II.' intrans. To satisfy need or desire. &J^3*ti^.^ t ZZ'*l 
Cleared of all suffusion, we shall contemplate that ful- 
ness which can only satiate without satiety. 
Evelyn, True Religion, I. 242. 
To give a satin finish to; make smooth an 
glossy on the surface like satin. 
'I 
Nodal Cubic, with l-'our Primary Lines and their Satellite. 
From its intersections with the cubic 
are dra' 
points _ 
lines, FDH, 
with the satellite line are 
are near H. The others are not shown. 
. 
. 
, satellite point, 
Pieces [of wall-paper] intended to be satined are ground- 
satiate (sa'shiat), a. [< L. satiate pp. : see the ed """ flne *"" "^ in8tead <* ^Dic? 1 m 478. 
verb.] Filled to satiety: glutted: satiated. sa tin-bird (sat'iu-berd), . The satin' bower- 
The sword shall devour, and it shall be satiate and made bird. See cut under bower-bird. 
Jer. xlvi. 10. satin.bust ( 8a t'in-bu 8 h), n. See Podalyria. 
Satiate with sweet %?* satin-carpet (sat'in-kar'pet), n. One of two 
Shelley, Prometheus Unbound, ii i different moths, Boarmia aUetaria, a geomet- 
Satiate with food, his heavy eyelids close ; d ' Vymatopliora fluetwsa, a noctuid : an 
Voluptuous minions fan him to repose. English collectors' name. 
Montgomery, The West Indies, iii. satin-cloth (sat'in-kldth), n. A thin woolen 
cloth with a smooth and glossy face, used es- 
is. 
'ask), n. A silk tex- 
tile with an elaborate design, usually of floral 
pattern. In some cases the pattern is raised 
(sat'in-de-lan'), n. [F. : satin. 
satin; dc, of; laine, wool.] 1. A smooth va- 
the state of being satiated 
a phenomenon for which the wise observer would have 
been prepared. Contemporary Rev., LII. 481. 
