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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
spoilt
I.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a spoilt/spoiled child (=allowed to do or have whatever he or she wants, and behaving badly)
▪ He’s behaving like a spoilt child.
spoilt brat (=a spoiled and unpleasant child)
▪ Ben was a spoilt brat .
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
child
▪ Rather like a spoilt child, he can force you into feeling that his survival depends on your constant presence and care.
▪ And you hounded him at work, wanting his attention all the time like a spoilt child.
▪ I have behaved like a spoilt child wanting its own way, she said to herself.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ After such a spoilt dreamy flight it is hard not to trample carelessly over the end of the night shift.
▪ And you hounded him at work, wanting his attention all the time like a spoilt child.
▪ But it is the derogatory, spoilt image which sticks as the group image.
▪ He was born when Brigitte was at the top, living as a spoilt star with actor-husband Jacques Charrier.
▪ I had become spoilt and pampered.
▪ Rather like a spoilt child, he can force you into feeling that his survival depends on your constant presence and care.
▪ She wasn't a spoilt beauty with no brains, was she?
II.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be spoilt/spoiled for choice
▪ As the Empire player you are spoiled for choice.
▪ Often, we seem to be spoiled for choice and hampered, even paralysed, by our fear of the unknown.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Spoilt

Spoil \Spoil\ (spoil), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Spoiled (spoild) or Spoilt (spoilt); p. pr. & vb. n. Spoiling.] [F. spolier, OF. espoillier, fr. L. spoliare, fr. spolium spoil. Cf. Despoil, Spoliation.]

  1. 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 possessions. ``Ye shall spoil the Egyptians.''
    --Ex. iii. 2

  2. My sons their old, unhappy sire despise, Spoiled of his kingdom, and deprived of eyes.
    --Pope.

    2. To seize by violence; to take by force; to plunder.

    No man can enter into a strong man's house, and spoil his goods, except he will first bind the strong man.
    --Mark iii. 27.

  3. To cause to decay and perish; to corrupt; to vitiate; to mar.

    Spiritual pride spoils many graces.
    --Jer. Taylor.

  4. 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.

Wiktionary
spoilt
  1. 1 (context UK English) Having lost its original value 2 Of food, that has deteriorated to the point of no longer being usable or edible. 3 (context of a person, usually a child English) Having a selfish or greedy character due to pampering alt. 1 (context UK English) Having lost its original value 2 Of food, that has deteriorated to the point of no longer being usable or edible. 3 (context of a person, usually a child English) Having a selfish or greedy character due to pampering v

  2. (en-past of: spoil)

WordNet
spoilt
  1. adj. having the character or disposition harmed by pampering or oversolicitous attention; "a spoiled child" [syn: spoiled]

  2. (of foodstuffs) not in an edible or usable condition; "bad meat"; "a refrigerator full of spoilt food" [syn: bad, spoiled]

  3. affected by blight--anything that mars or events growth or prosperity; "a blighted rose"; "blighted urtan districts" [syn: blighted]

spoil
  1. v. make a mess of, destroy or ruin; "I botched the dinner and we had to eat out"; "the pianist screwed up the difficult passage in the second movement" [syn: botch, bumble, fumble, botch up, muff, blow, flub, screw up, ball up, muck up, bungle, fluff, bollix, bollix up, bollocks, bollocks up, bobble, mishandle, louse up, foul up, mess up, fuck up]

  2. become unfit for consumption or use; "the meat must be eaten before it spoils" [syn: go bad]

  3. alter from the original [syn: corrupt]

  4. treat with excessive indulgence; "grandparents often pamper the children"; "Let's not mollycoddle our students!" [syn: pamper, featherbed, cosset, cocker, baby, coddle, mollycoddle, indulge]

  5. hinder or prevent (the efforts, plans, or desires) of; "What ultimately frustrated every challenger was Ruth's amazing September surge"; "foil your opponent" [syn: thwart, queer, scotch, foil, cross, frustrate, baffle, bilk]

  6. have a strong desire or urge to do something; "She is itching to start the project"; "He is spoiling for a fight" [syn: itch]

  7. destroy and strip of its possession; "The soldiers raped the beautiful country" [syn: rape, despoil, violate, plunder]

  8. make imperfect; "nothing marred her beauty" [syn: mar, impair, deflower, vitiate]

  9. [also: spoilt]

spoil
  1. n. (usually plural) valuables taken by violence (especially in war); "to the victor belong the spoils of the enemy"

  2. the act of spoiling something by causing damage to it; "her spoiling my dress was deliberate" [syn: spoiling, spoilage]

  3. the act of stripping and taking by force [syn: spoliation, spoilation, despoilation, despoilment, despoliation]

  4. [also: spoilt]

spoilt

See spoil

Usage examples of "spoilt".

Perhaps Giles Buckthorn, the spoilt and shallow Grand Tourist, was nothing but an artful impersonation.

I lost no time in exordiums, but came to the point at once, by saying that as a lover of paintings I had been grieved at finding the magnificent Madonna spoilt.

A number of the clerks in the other offices were foolish enough to complain to Calsabigi that I had spoilt their gains, but he sent them about their business telling them that to get the better of me they had only to do as I did--if they had the money.

This made me increase my bank, and when the game was over, I was glad to see that everybody had won except the canon, but his losses had not spoilt his temper.

A folded rose-leaf spoilt the repose of the famous Smindyrides, who loved a soft bed.

Her initial elation at being trusted with his correspondence, at being installed in his very own chair at the polished walnut helm of Rackham Perfumeries, has been spoilt by his frighteningly volatile moods.

Brolly told a splendid story about how you used to go out swimming in the evenings and swim for hours and hours in the dark composing elegiac verses, and then he spoilt it by saying you had webbed feet and a prehensile tail, which made the chap think he was having his leg pulled.

She had made gods of the Standish men and they had made a spoilt little goddess out of her.

Sah-luma, irritated at the sudden interruption that had thus distracted the general attention from his own fair and flattered self, gave an expressively petulant glance toward Theos, who smiled back at him soothingly as one who seeks to coax a spoilt child out of its ill-humor, and then all eyes were turned expectantly toward the entrance of the audiencechamber.

De Tournay told me he repented of coming with Rullecour, and he felt he had spoilt his life--that he could never return to France again or to his people.

I put it in my prayer-book in order to preserve it when I could keep it in water no longer, and it has stained the leaf, and spoilt the Athanasian Creed.

When the universal jollity had reached its height, two Bayaderes, who belonged to the suite of the Maharajah of Sabathu, made their appearance, Indian beauties, whose voluptuous feminine charms were calculated to make the blood even of the spoilt European run warm.

Now Jack spoilt the beauty of the great cabin by causing Mr Gray to build the equivalent of a deep wing-transom, with the corresponding knees, massive enough to withstand the recoil of his brass ninepounders, so that by removing the stern windows as though to ship deadlights, together with some of the gingerbread-work from the gallery, he could use them as chasers, firing from a higher station than the more usual gunroom ports.

The little girls shared their goodies with their favorite mates, but said nothing about the new arrangement, fearing it would be spoilt if generally known.

The tigress was undoubtedly familiar with every foot of the ground, and not having had an opportunity of killing me at the rocks - and her chance of bagging me at the first hairpin bend having been spoilt by the kakar - she was probably now making her way through the dense undergrowth to try to intercept me at the second bend.