Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    spoil
    /spɔɪl/

    verb

    • 1. diminish or destroy the value or quality of: "I wouldn't want to spoil your fun" Similar mardamageimpairblemishOpposite improveenhance
    • 2. harm the character of (someone, especially a child) by being too lenient or indulgent: "the last thing I want to do is spoil Thomas" Similar overindulgepamperindulgemollycoddleOpposite neglecttreat harshlybe strict with

    noun

    • 1. goods stolen or taken forcibly from a person or place: "the looters carried their spoils away"
    • 2. waste material brought up during the course of an excavation or a dredging or mining operation: "colliery spoil"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. People also ask

  3. Learn the meaning of spoil as a verb and a noun, with usage examples and synonyms. Find out how to spoil something, someone, or yourself, and how to spoil your ballot paper.

  4. Learn the various meanings and uses of the word spoil as a verb and a noun, with synonyms, examples, and etymology. Find out how to distinguish spoil from related words like decay, decompose, rot, and putrefy.

  5. Spoil means to damage, harm, or ruin something or someone, or to become unfit or tainted. It can also mean to plunder, pillage, or rob, or to win the spoils of office. Learn more about its origin, usage, and related phrases.

  6. When you spoil something, you destroy it or ruin its quality. If you spoil a surprise, you tell the secret you were supposed to keep. When you spoil something, you mess it up, like spoiling someone's good mood by bringing up a painful memory.

  7. Learn the meaning and usage of the verb spoil and its related words, such as spoilt, spoils, spoil for choice, and spoil someone's day. Find out the difference between spoil and ruin, spoil and plunder, and spoil and irony.

  8. Learn the meaning, pronunciation and examples of the verb spoil, which can mean to change something good into something bad, to give a child too much, to make something happy, or to mark a ballot paper incorrectly. See also idioms and synonyms related to spoil.

  9. Spoil can mean to damage, ruin, or impair something or someone, or to plunder or take by force. It can also refer to the goods or benefits gained by a victor, or the waste material from an excavation.