How to Use insatiable in a Sentence

insatiable

adjective
  • Her desire for knowledge was insatiable.
  • There is so much money, and there is this insatiable need to win.
    Elton Alexander, cleveland.com, 2 Mar. 2018
  • As an avid baker with an insatiable sweet tooth, this one should've been easy for me.
    Lyndsey Matthews, Country Living, 17 Feb. 2017
  • The media were so insatiable back then.
    Lizzie Lanuza, StyleCaster, 7 Oct. 2025
  • Our insatiable appetite for the new can lead us to yawn at the classics.
    Dave McIntyre, Washington Post, 13 Mar. 2020
  • At the core of the model lies the brain’s insatiable appetite.
    Quanta Magazine, 23 Aug. 2016
  • Rutledge makes some fair points, but too bad they’re tainted by an insatiable greed.
    Lovia Gyarkye, HollywoodReporter, 9 Apr. 2025
  • Bailey decried the insatiable hunger the millinery trade had for birds.
    John Kelly, Washington Post, 25 May 2022
  • By far the strongest is the insatiable craving for power for its own sake.
    Bruce Fein, Baltimore Sun, 13 Feb. 2025
  • Heaven on Earth, for a woman with an insatiable need to feed.
    Steve Hartman, CBS News, 22 June 2018
  • The district has an insatiable appetite for spending that needs to stop.
    Letters To The Editor, The Mercury News, 18 Oct. 2024
  • The drive for addiction with some of our children is insatiable.
    Jeff Caplan, star-telegram, 20 Feb. 2018
  • Those eight years in Israel didn’t seem to make a dent in his insatiable need for the spotlight.
    Brian Davids, The Hollywood Reporter, 29 May 2023
  • Yet despite that flood of new units, the demand remains insatiable.
    John Gallagher, Detroit Free Press, 14 May 2018
  • Trump’s insatiable thirst for revenge.
    Ruth Marcus, New Yorker, 12 Oct. 2025
  • First, the demand for software is insatiable.
    IEEE Spectrum, 9 Oct. 2025
  • Appetite for the races has become insatiable.
    Ben Goggin, NBC news, 25 Oct. 2025
  • His appetite for self-knowledge is insatiable.
    Carly Tagen-Dye, PEOPLE, 2 Apr. 2026
  • With the warmer months comes an insatiable desire to take advantage of the great outdoors.
    Kevin Brouillard, Travel + Leisure, 31 May 2022
  • But that manifests with her as a sort of vengeful, insatiable anger and need for revenge.
    EW.com, 26 Aug. 2025
  • My hunger to learn more is insatiable; the response, staggering.
    BostonGlobe.com, 28 Sep. 2019
  • The insatiable demand for his edible art has not slowed down ever since.
    Colleen McNally Arnett, Southern Living, 31 Mar. 2026
  • The fact that Amazon no longer needs its insatiable founder is cause for worry, not relief.
    Jacob Silverman, The New Republic, 3 Feb. 2021
  • As life on the ship descends into chaos, they’re consumed by fear, lust, and the insatiable hunger for power.
    Tony Bradley, Forbes, 9 Apr. 2021
  • In the movie, a masked man with an insatiable thirst for murder stalks babysitters on Halloween night.
    Keith Langston, PEOPLE, 30 Oct. 2025
  • The guides give you a couple of examples of the dam’s insatiable concrete needs during the tour.
    Roger Naylor, azcentral, 23 May 2018
  • Kuras cited the insatiable appetite of viewers as the reason for the push for content.
    Jazz Tangcay, Variety, 21 Mar. 2022
  • What struck me most in that Khartoum hotel room were his empathy and his insatiable need to know.
    Jeffrey Fleishman, Los Angeles Times, 29 Dec. 2024
  • Trump had won the election by feeding the insatiable anti-elitist hunger in the nation.
    Thomas Meaney, Harper's magazine, 20 Jan. 2020
  • Nvidia said that the changes won’t affect its sales for now, given the insatiable demand for its products elsewhere.
    Ian King, Fortune, 22 Nov. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'insatiable.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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