Usually means: Ruining something by giving excess.
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We found 39 dictionaries that define the word spoil:

General (28 matching dictionaries)
  1. spoil: Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
  2. spoil: Merriam-Webster
  3. spoil: Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
  4. spoil: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
  5. spoil: Collins English Dictionary
  6. spoil: Vocabulary.com
  7. Spoil, spoil: Wordnik
  8. spoil: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  9. spoil: Wiktionary
  10. spoil: Webster's New World College Dictionary, 4th Ed.
  11. spoil: The Wordsmyth English Dictionary-Thesaurus
  12. spoil: Infoplease Dictionary
  13. spoil: Dictionary.com
  14. spoil: Online Etymology Dictionary
  15. spoil: Cambridge Essential American English Dictionary
  16. Spoil (archaeology), Spoil: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
  17. Spoil: Online Plain Text English Dictionary
  18. spoil: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition
  19. spoil: Rhymezone
  20. spoil: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary
  21. spoil: Webster's 1828 Dictionary
  22. spoil: FreeDictionary.org
  23. spoil: Mnemonic Dictionary
  24. spoil: TheFreeDictionary.com
  25. Spoil: World Wide Words
  26. spoil: Wikimedia Commons US English Pronunciations

Business (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. Construction Term Glossary (No longer online)
  2. spoil: Legal dictionary

Computing (1 matching dictionary)
  1. spoil: Encyclopedia

Medicine (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. online medical dictionary (No longer online)
  2. spoil: Medical dictionary

Miscellaneous (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. SPOIL: Acronym Finder
  2. spoil: Idioms

Science (1 matching dictionary)
  1. Illustrated Glossary of Geologic Terms (No longer online)

Slang (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. spoil: Green’s Dictionary of Slang
  2. Spoil: Urban Dictionary

Tech (1 matching dictionary)
  1. Lake and Water Word Glossary (No longer online)

(Note: See spoilable as well.)

Definitions from Wiktionary (
)
American English Definition British English Definition
verb:  (transitive, archaic) To strip (someone who has been killed or defeated) of their arms or armour.
verb:  (transitive, archaic) To strip or deprive (someone) of their possessions; to rob, despoil.
verb:  (ambitransitive, archaic) To plunder, pillage (a city, country etc.).
verb:  (transitive, obsolete) To carry off (goods) by force; to steal.
verb:  (transitive) To ruin; to damage (something) in some way making it unfit for use.
verb:  (transitive) To ruin the character of, by overindulgence; to coddle or pamper to excess.
verb:  (intransitive) Of food, to become bad, sour or rancid; to decay.
verb:  (transitive) To render (a ballot paper) invalid by deliberately defacing it.
verb:  (transitive) To reveal the ending or major events of (a story etc.); to ruin (a surprise) by exposing it ahead of time as a spoiler.
verb:  (aviation) To reduce the lift generated by an airplane or wing by deflecting air upwards, usually with a spoiler.
verb:  (intransitive) To be very eager for something.
noun:  (Also in plural: spoils) Plunder taken from an enemy or victim.
noun:  (archaic) The act of taking plunder from an enemy or victim; spoliation, pillage, rapine.
noun:  (uncountable) Material (such as rock or earth) removed in the course of an excavation, or in mining or dredging. Tailings. Such material could be utilised somewhere else.

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