Yes
No, the word spoil is a verb (spoil, spoils, spoiling, spoiled). The past participle of the verb, spoiled, is an adjective.
The part of speech depends on how the word is used. See the examples below. They spoiled the surprise. spoiled = verb He threw out the spoiled meat. spoiled = adjective
There are at least two ways of translating the word 'spoiled' into Latin. One way is the adjective corruptus. The other is the adjective vitiatus.
The word "bad" (evil, naughty, spoiled, or inedible) isan adjective, and more rarely a noun (e.g. the good and the bad).
"Rotten" can function as both an adjective and a verb. As an adjective, it describes something that is decayed or spoiled. As a verb, it refers to the process of decaying or becoming spoiled.
The French word for spoiled is "gâté / gâtée"
To say "spoiled" in Yoruba, you can use the word "ọmọdéde."
Not sure which you meant so... Spoiled (food): 'Echado a perder' and spoiled (child): 'Mimado'
In the sentence "Spats is the name of my very spoiled cat," the participle is "spoiled." It describes the noun "cat" and indicates a state of being, functioning as an adjective in this context.
Duine gan mhúineadh (spoiled person).
Build
estropeado