See also: sats, Sats, and SATs

Latvian

edit

Etymology

edit

From Proto-Indo-European *seh₂- (to satiate, be satisfied). Cognates include Lithuanian sotis (satiety), Sanskrit असिन्व (a-sinvá, insatiable), Ancient Greek ἄω (áō, to satiate) Latin satis (enough, filled) and Old English sæd (full, sated).

Noun

edit

sāts m (1st declension) (usually only singular)

  1. moderation
  2. satiety, satiation
  3. fill

Declension

edit
Declension of sāts (1st declension)
singular plural
nominative sāts
genitive sāta
dative sātam
accusative sātu
instrumental sātu
locative sātā
vocative sāt

Derived terms

edit