What is the meaning of SPOIL. Phrases containing SPOIL
See meanings and uses of SPOIL!Slangs & AI meanings
The cook; also referred to as grub spoiler or grubworm.
v 1. To go away; depart. Let's blow this town. 2. To spend money freely and rashly. I blew all my money at the race track. 3. To perform fellatio. 4. To spoil or lose through ineptitude. n. Cocaine. Phrasal Verbs:blow away 1. To kill by shooting, especially with a firearm. 2. To defeat decisively. 3. To affect intensely; overwhelm: That concert blew me away. blow in To arrive, especially when unexpected. blow off To choose not to attend or accompany: They wanted us to come along, but we blew them off. blow a fuse To explode with anger. blow (one's) cool To lose one's composure. blow (one's) mind To affect with intense emotion, such as amazement, excitement, or shock. blow chunks To vomit.
A spoil sport
spoil an injection
Large spoilers, spliters, wings etc found on road cars to try and make them look like some sort of racing car.
Spoil is slang for inflict serious bodily injury on.
a method for keeping partially dried and dried cod-fish from spoiling or developing “dun†when damp weather conditions prevailed tht did not allow for spreading. Salted and drying ish would be unpacked from one pile and replaced into another to kee “dun†and other conditions from harming the fish.
Spoiling for a fight, also referred to as "proddy."Â
Park spoiler is British slang for a new−age traveller or tinker.
Ruin and spoil is London Cockney rhyming slang for oil.
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v. t.
To render useless by injury; to injure fatally; to ruin; to destroy; as, to spoil paper; to have the crops spoiled by insects; to spoil the eyes by reading.
v. t.
To plunder; to strip by violence; to pillage; to rob; -- with of before the name of the thing taken; as, to spoil one of his goods or possession.
imp. & p. p.
of Spoil
v. t.
To pull roughly or hastily; to plunder; to spoil; to tear.
n.
One who serves a cause or a party for a share of the spoils; in United States politics, one who makes or recognizes a demand for public office on the ground of partisan service; also, one who sanctions such a policy in appointments to the public service.
a.
Spoiled by wet; -- said of timber.
a.
Stuck; spoiled in making.
a.
Tending to spoil; destructive; spoliative.
n.
To injure, mar, spoil, or harm.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Spoil
n.
Manner of working; management; treatment; as, unskillful work spoiled the effect.
n.
One who spoils; a plunderer; a pillager; a robber; a despoiler.
v.
Spoil, destruction, or injury, done to houses, woods, fences, lands, etc., by a tenant for life or for years, to the prejudice of the heir, or of him in reversion or remainder.
n.
A certain game at cards in which, if no player wins three of the five tricks possible on any deal, the game is said to be spoiled.
v. i.
To lose the valuable qualities; to be corrupted; to decay; as, fruit will soon spoil in warm weather.
n.
Public offices and their emoluments regarded as the peculiar property of a successful party or faction, to be bestowed for its own advantage; -- commonly in the plural; as to the victor belong the spoils.
a.
Capable of being spoiled.
pl.
of Spoilsman
v. t.
To make vicious, faulty, or imperfect; to render defective; to injure the substance or qualities of; to impair; to contaminate; to spoil; as, exaggeration vitiates a style of writing; sewer gas vitiates the air.
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