SPOIL


Meaning of SPOIL in English

I. ˈspȯil, esp before pause or consonant -ȯiəl; dial ˈspī(ə)l noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English spoile, from Middle French espoille, espuille, from Latin spolium hide stripped from an animal, armor stripped from an enemy, booty — more at spill

1.

a.

(1) : the plunder taken in war : material, land, or property seized or confiscated by the victor of an armed aggression

claim … colonies in Africa as its share of the spoils of war — Vera M. Dean

courts his future wife knowing he has already won her as a spoil of war — Richard Corliss

(2) : arms or armor stripped from a defeated enemy

b. : something taken unlawfully usually by stealth

steal from the rich and give the spoils to the poor — E.V.Lucas

2.

a. : the act or practice of plundering : spoliation

would have given their town up to spoil — Sir Walter Scott

b. obsolete : an act of plunder

the man that hath no music in himself … is fit for treason, stratagems, and spoils — Shakespeare

c. : an object of plunder

fire the palace, the fort …, leave to the foeman no spoil at all — Rudyard Kipling

3.

a. obsolete : an injurious or destructive act

b. : the act of damaging : harm , impairment , ruin

villainous company hath been the spoil of me — Shakespeare

4.

a. obsolete : the cast skin of a snake : slough

b. : the cast skin of an animal ; also : a treated animal hide

moccasins of the spoil of deer

c. spoils plural : animal remains

5.

a. : something that is gained by strength or special effort

the spoils of a conservative industrial life — Van Wyck Brooks

b. : a collector's item (as an antique, rare book, or natural specimen) acquired by special and knowledgeable skill or search

6. : public offices and their emoluments that are the peculiar property of a successful political party or faction to be bestowed for its own advantage — usually used in plural

patronage and spoils … have helped to finance complete party machinery — D.D.McKean

to the victors belong the spoils — W.L.Marcy

7. : material (as refuse earth or rock) excavated usually in mining, dredging, or excavating

8.

[ spoil (II) ]

: something imperfectly made : an object having flaws produced in the process of manufacture

9.

[ spoil (II) ]

a. : a deal in spoil five in which no player wins the pool

b. : the act of winning a trick that causes this result

II. verb

( spoiled -ld, -lt ; or spoilt -lt ; spoiled or spoilt ; spoiling ; spoils )

Etymology: Middle English spoilen, from Middle French espoillier, from Latin spoliare, from spolium spoil

transitive verb

1.

a. archaic : to despoil (an enemy) especially of armor and weapons on the field of battle

b. archaic : divest , strip — often used with of

made to spoil themselves of soiled arms — Edmund Spenser

2. archaic : to seize or take possession of by force or violence : plunder

enter into a man's house and spoil his goods — Mt 12:29 (Authorized Version)

3. : to strip by violent means : rob

deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor — Jer 21:12 (Authorized Version)

recovery of property of which it has been spoiled — W.E.Channing

4. : to sack of valuable possessions : pillage

bind the strong man and then he will spoil his house — Mt 12:29 (Authorized Version)

5. : deprive

I may spoil the Egyptians of a proverb — J.L.Lowes

6. : to cut up (a hen) : carve

think of the pleasure of calling on the hostess for a ruling as to whether one was … spoiling a hen — Basil Davenport

7. : to cause to decay or perish : cause to become of little or no use or value : seriously impair : mar , ruin

the whole island … was inundated, and much valuable land spoiled — J.A.Steers

more rain had fallen, the hay crop was spoilt — George Moore

these thoughts … spoilt my sleep — Nevil Shute

8.

a. archaic : destroy , kill

go down … and spoil them until the morning light, and let us not leave a man of them — 1 Sam 14:36 (Authorized Version)

b. obsolete : to injure seriously

9. : ravish

am quite sure he would not spoil a virgin — Raymond Chandler

10.

a. : to impair or injure the disposition or character of (a person) usually by overindulgence, excessive adulation, or praise

spoiled by the high status accorded to them in their communities — Will Durant

our only little girl, and … we spoil her — Margaret Deland

b. : to pamper excessively : coddle

intransitive verb

1. : to practice plunder and robbery

2. : to lose the best or valuable properties or qualities : become corrupted or tainted

fruit will soon spoil in warm weather

3. : to have an excessive desire especially as a result of long deprivation : be extremely eager — usually used with for

was spoiling for a fight — Earle Birney

4. : to play a defensive game often with marked emphasis on the thwarting of the opponents' efforts to start offensive movements

spoiling in soccer by constantly kicking the ball out of play

Synonyms: see decay , indulge , injure

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.