Find the word definition

Wiktionary
unspoil

vb. (context transitive English) To make less spoiled.

Usage examples of "unspoil".

Then an appellate court ruled that the tournament violates the deed, as written by the Matheson family when it donated the unspoiled property half a century ago.

The California-based club had achieved a national reputation for skill and dedication in fights to preserve what remained of the natural unspoiled beauty of America.

There would be strong objections, Nim already knew, to transferring this scene to the unspoiled wilderness of Tunipah.

Cameron Clarke: I am here, as an ordinary humble citizen, to protest an ill-conceived, sordid and totally unneeded scheme which would desecrate the magnificent, unspoiled area of California known as Tunipah.

You could still, at that late stage in the war, come across unspoiled villages where the inhabitants seemed almost unaware that only a few kilometres distant fierce fighting had wiped out a whole community and half an army.

His uniform was still new and relatively unspoiled but the flesh was turning putrid on the bones.

Jarom felt their eyes upon him, and thought of himself as a trespasser in this unspoiled wilderness.

There it lay, unspoiled before them, the talisman for which they had come in search.

They said Rinpoche-La was the last truly unspoiled place on earth, a sort of terrestrial Nirvana where the inhabitants were free from the daily burden of human existence.

For all the talk of preserving unspoiled wilderness, few left the sheltered hives to see it.

Eddie followed him outside and they picked their way through the alleys and out onto the ill-defined path that led out through the fields to the wild unspoiled plain.

Like most primitive worlds, Pa-Liina had a certain brutal, unspoiled beauty.

It is a practice common enough among the great, to rear their children in other courts, where they may stay unspoiled by arrogance, uncorrupted by flattery, and safe from the contriving of treachery and ambition.

The shops and the landscape--the cosmopolitan crowd with its Babel of many tongues--the great hotels, built of stucco in the nouveau-riche style so rasping to sensitive nerves--the striped awnings, the low balconies, the gaudy house-fronts--all these our heroines looked at and commented on and revelled in with the joy of fresh and unspoiled youth.

Irish experience, steeping themselves in another culture, experiencing the simple, unspoiled peasant cuisine.