satisfy: [15] Etymologically, satisfy means ‘make enough’. It comes, via Old French satisfier, from Latin satisfacere ‘satisfy, content’, a compound verb formed from satis ‘enough’ (a relative of English sad, sated, and saturate, and source of English satiate). The derived noun satisfaction reached English well over a century before the verb, in the specialized ecclesiastical sense ‘performance of penance’. => sad, sated, satiate, saturate
satisfy (v.)
early 15c., from Middle French satisfier, from Old French satisfaire "pay, repay, make reparation" (14c., Modern French satisfaire), from Latin satisfacere "discharge fully, comply with, make amends," literally "do enough," from satis "enough" (from PIE root *sa- "to satisfy;" see sad) + facere "to make, do, perform" (see factitious). Related: Satisfied; satisfying.
雙語(yǔ)例句
1. Cheap goods are available, but not in sufficient quantities to satisfy demand.
有一些廉價(jià)的商品,但是數(shù)量不足以滿(mǎn)足需求。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
2. They are there only to satisfy their ghoulish curiosity.
他們?nèi)ツ抢锛兇馐菫榱藵M(mǎn)足其病態(tài)的好奇心。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
3. The scandal stories satisfy people's curiosity for a few hours.