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Satisfaction

individual's experience of a sense of fulfillment of a need or want and the quality or state of being satisfied

Satisfaction is closely related to contentment, and is generally the idea of being pleased with what one has.

Quotes

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  • God has not the slightest difficulty in bringing to a fullness of creation the person who is in some way incomplete and recognises this. The problem is with those who think that they are complete, and that creation is, at least in their case, finished.
  • There is no greater satisfaction than a child who, when grown and at the age of accountability, is able to forgive us.
    • Rosario Castellanos "In Praise of Friendship" (1964) In Another Way to Be: Selected Works of Rosario Castellanos translated from Spanish by Myralyn Allgood
  • Les délicats sont malheureux,
    Rien ne saurait les satisfaire.
    • The fastidious are unfortunate: nothing can satisfy them.
    • Jean de La Fontaine, Fables (1668–1679), II. 1.
  • Est bien fou du cerveau
    Qui prétend contenter tout le monde et son père.
    • He is very foolish who aims at satisfying all the world and his father.
    • Jean de La Fontaine, Fables (1668–1679), III. 1.
  • Give me, indulgent gods! with mind serene,
    And guiltless heart, to range the sylvan scene;
    No splendid poverty, no smiling care,
    No well-bred hate, or servile grandeur, there.

Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations

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Quotes reported in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922), p. 690-91.
  • Multa petentibus
    Desunt multa.
    Bene est, cui Deus obtulit
    Parca, quod satis est manu.
    • Those who seek for much are left in want of much. Happy is he to whom God has given, with sparing hand, as much as is enough.
    • Horace, Carmina, Book III. 16. 42.
  • Ohe! jam satis est.
    • Now, that's enough.
    • Horace, Epistles, I. 5. 12. Martial—Epigrams, IV. 91. 1.
  • Sed tacitus pasci si posset corvus, haberet
    Plus dapis, et rixæ multo minus invidiæque.
    • If the crow had been satisfied to eat his prey in silence, he would have had more meat and less quarreling and envy.
    • Horace, Epistles, I. 17. 50.
  • My cup runneth over.
    • Psalms, XXIII. 5.
  • Mach' es Wenigen recht; vielen gefallen ist schlimm.
  • Nullius boni sine sociis jucunda possessio est.
    • There is no satisfaction in any good without a companion.
    • Seneca the Younger, Epistolæ Ad Lucilium, VI.
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