Whereas Dickens describes Scrooge as “a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous, old sinner,” that still leaves plenty of room to imagine what he was like when he was getting started in 1800.
Washington Post
(Oct 22, 2019)
If you covet something, you want it very badly — maybe even badly enough that you'd do something dishonest to get it.
given to excess in consumption of especially food or drink
This is garish, macho, gluttonous food TV aimed squarely at young people with short attention spans.
The Guardian
(May 15, 2013)
Glutire means "to gulp down" or "to swallow" in Latin, and a glut of something is too much of it. A glutton is someone who eats too much, or has an oversize appetite.
The price of sugar dropped and Europe developed an insatiable sweet tooth.
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
Satiety is the state of being full, particularly with food. So to be insatiable is to have hunger — literally or figuratively — that cannot be satisfied.
Newspaper editors evinced a voracious appetite for news of the latest breakthroughs.
Big Science
Vorare means "to devour" in Latin. You can see the same root in herbivore, for example. Voracious means having an enormous appetite. Voracious is not always a negative word. For example, it's considered a good thing to be a voracious reader.
Created on Tue Jun 24 13:00:56 EDT 2025
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