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    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. SPOIL definition: 1. to destroy or reduce the pleasure, interest, or beauty of something: 2. When food spoils or is…. Learn more.

  3. spoil is the general term: to spoil a delicate fabric. ruin implies doing completely destructive or irreparable injury: to ruin one's health. wreck implies a violent breaking up or demolition: to wreck oneself with drink; to wreck a building.

  4. Spoil definition: to damage severely or harm (something), especially with reference to its excellence, value, usefulness, etc.. See examples of SPOIL used in a sentence.

  5. spoil, more commonly spoils, applies to what belongs by right or custom to the victor in war or political contest. the spoils of political victory plunder applies to what is taken not only in war but in robbery, banditry, grafting, or swindling.

  6. (saying) to cause something good to fail because you did not spend a small but necessary amount of money or time on a small but essential part of it. too many cooks spoil the broth. (saying) if too many people are involved in doing something, it will not be done well.

  7. SPOILS definition: 1. goods, advantages, profits, etc. that you get by your actions or because of your position or…. Learn more.

  8. 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.

  9. SPOIL meaning: 1 : to have a bad effect on (something) to damage or ruin (something); 2 : to decay or lose freshness especially because of being kept too long

  10. n. 1. spoils. a. Goods or property seized from a victim after a conflict, especially after a military victory. b. Incidental benefits reaped by a winner, especially political patronage enjoyed by a successful party or candidate. 2. An object of plunder; prey. 3. Refuse material removed from an excavation. 4.

  11. Definitions of 'spoil'. 1. If you spoil something, you prevent it from being successful or satisfactory. [...] 2. If you spoil children, you give them everything they want or ask for. This is considered to have a bad effect on a child's character. [...] 3.