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1 spoil
1.1) (impair) verderben; ruinieren [Leben]the news spoilt his dinner/evening — die Nachricht verdarb ihm das Essen/den Abend
2) (injure character of) verderben (geh.); verziehen [Kind]3) (pamper) verwöhnen2. intransitive verb,1) (go bad) verderben2)3. nounbe spoiling for a fight/for trouble — Streit/Ärger suchen
(plunder)spoil[s] — Beute, die
* * *[spoil]past tense, past participles - spoiled, spoilt; verb1) (to damage or ruin; to make bad or useless: If you touch that drawing you'll spoil it.) verderben2) (to give (a child etc) too much of what he wants and possibly make his character, behaviour etc worse by doing so: They spoil that child dreadfully and she's becoming unbearable!)•- academic.ru/118553/spoils">spoils- spoilt
- spoilsport* * *[spɔɪl]I. n2. (profits)to divide the \spoils die Beute aufteilen▪ \spoils pl Vorteile plII. vt1. (ruin)▪ to \spoil sth etw verderbento \spoil sb's afternoon/day/morning jdm den Nachmittag/Tag/Morgen verderbento \spoil one's appetite sich dat den Appetit verderbento \spoil one's ballot paper BRIT seinen Stimmzettel ungültig machento \spoil sb's fun jdm den Spaß verderbento \spoil sb's life jds Leben ruinierento \spoil the news/a secret die Neuigkeit/ein Geheimnis ausplaudernto \spoil sb's party [or to \spoil the party for sb] jdm den Spaß verderben2. (treat well)▪ to \spoil sb/oneself jdn/sich verwöhnento \spoil a child ( pej) ein Kind verziehento be spoilt for choice eine große Auswahl habenIII. vi2. (want)to be \spoiling for a fight/trouble Streit/Ärger suchen* * *[spɔɪl] vb: pret, ptp spoilt ( Brit) or spoiled1. n usu plBeute f no pl; (fig = profits also) Gewinn mspoils of office — Vergünstigungen pl im Amt
2. vt1) (= ruin, detract from) verderben; town, looks etc verschandeln; peace of mind zerstören; life ruinieren; (Brit) ballot papers ungültig machenit spoiled our evening — das hat uns (dat) den Abend verdorben
if you eat now you'll spoil your lunch — wenn du jetzt etwas isst, verdirbst du dir den Appetit fürs Mittagessen
to be spoiled for choice — eine übergroße Auswahl haben, die Qual der Wahl haben
3. vi1) (food) verderben2)to be spoiling for trouble/a fight — Ärger/Streit suchen
* * *spoil [spɔıl]A v/t prät und pperf spoiled [spɔıld] oder spoilt [spɔılt]1. etwas, auch jemandem den Appetit, den Spaß etc verderben, eine Hauswand etc verschandeln, einen Plan vereiteln, einen Stimmzettel ungültig machen:spoil sb’s appetite2. a) jemandes Charakter etc verderbena spoiled brat ein verzogener Fratz;the spoiled child of fortune Fortunas Lieblingskind;spoil o.s. sich etwas Gutes tun, sich etwas gönnen;be spoilt for choice die Qual der Wahl haben3. obsb) etwas raubenB v/i1. verderben, kaputtgehen, schlecht werden (Obst etc)be spoiling for a fight streitlustig sein, Streit suchen3. obs plündern, raubenC s1. meist pl (Kriegs-, Sieges- etc) Beute f:2. meist pl besonders USa) Ausbeute fb) POL Gewinn m, Einkünfte pl (einer Partei nach dem Wahlsieg):the spoils of office der Profit aus einem öffentlichen Amt3. obs Plünderung f, Raub m4. Bergbau etc: Abraum m* * *1.1) (impair) verderben; ruinieren [Leben]the news spoilt his dinner/evening — die Nachricht verdarb ihm das Essen/den Abend
2) (injure character of) verderben (geh.); verziehen [Kind]3) (pamper) verwöhnen2. intransitive verb,1) (go bad) verderben2)3. nounbe spoiling for a fight/for trouble — Streit/Ärger suchen
spoil[s] — Beute, die
* * *n.Abraum -¨e m.Ausbeute - f.Aushub -¨e m. v.(§ p.,p.p.: spoiled)or p.p.: spoilt•) = behindern v.beschädigen v.plündern v.verderben v.(§ p.,pp.: verdarb, ist/hat verdorben)verwöhnen v. v.beschädigen v.
См. также в других словарях:
spoils — noun VERB + SPOILS ▪ divide, share ▪ The soldiers began to divide the spoils. ▪ claim, take ▪ enjoy ▪ … Collocations dictionary
blotted — verb (T) 1 to dry a wet surface by pressing soft paper or cloth on it 2 blot your copybook informal to do something that spoils the idea that people have of you blot sth out phrasal verb (T) to cover or hide something completely: Thick, white… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
blotting — verb (T) 1 to dry a wet surface by pressing soft paper or cloth on it 2 blot your copybook informal to do something that spoils the idea that people have of you blot sth out phrasal verb (T) to cover or hide something completely: Thick, white… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bear away — verb remove from a certain place, environment, or mental or emotional state; transport into a new location or state Their dreams carried the Romantics away into distant lands The car carried us off to the meeting I ll take you away on a holiday I … Useful english dictionary
go bad — verb 1. stop operating or functioning The engine finally went The car died on the road The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town The coffee maker broke The engine failed on the way to town her eyesight went after the accident • Sy … Useful english dictionary
take — verb ADVERB ▪ well ▪ badly ▪ She took the news of her father s death very badly. ▪ seriously ▪ I wanted to be taken seriously as an artist … Collocations dictionary
enjoy — verb ADVERB ▪ enormously, greatly, hugely, immensely, really, thoroughly, tremendously, truly ▪ She greatly enjoys her work … Collocations dictionary
interfere — verb (I) to deliberately get involved in a situation that does not concern you, and try to influence what happens in a way that annoys people: I wish you d stop interfering you ve caused enough problems already. | the interfering old busybody (+… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
foray into — verb enter someone else s territory and take spoils The pirates raided the coastal villages regularly • Syn: ↑raid • Derivationally related forms: ↑raider (for: ↑raid) • Hypernyms: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
ninja loot — verb To unfairly loot the corpse of a fallen enemy before other members of the party can divvy the spoils … Wiktionary
spoil — verb (past and past participle spoilt (chiefly Brit.) or spoiled) 1》 diminish or destroy the value or quality of. ↘(of food) become unfit for eating. ↘mark (a ballot paper) incorrectly so as to invalidate one s vote. 2》 harm the character … English new terms dictionary