to spoil (meaning, to rot) = kilkel (קלקל)
to spoil (a child) = pinek (×¤×™× ×§)
Doesn't giving the answer to a student spoil them?
An answer did not appear because "spoilt" is not a word. The present tense of this word is spoil, or to spoil. The future tense is will spoil, or shall spoil. And, as you are implying you need, the past tense of this verb is spoiled. Here is the word in a sentence: That girl is so spoiled!!! Her parents give her whatever she wants. My grandmother likes to spoil me.
"Spoil" appears twice in Psalms (44:10; 68:12). Two slightly different words are used in the original Hebrew, but in context, both can mean "plunder" or "booty." In the second instance, the word can also mean "dubious gain."
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
No, the word spoil is a verb (spoil, spoils, spoiling, spoiled). The past participle of the verb, spoiled, is an adjective.
There are four phonemes in the word "spoil": /s/, /p/, /ɔɪ/, and /l/.
Calalini is not a Hebrew word and has no meaning in Hebrew.
The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew definition.The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew word. It's a name. You can spell it ווֹמאק in Hebrew letters.
Sydney is not a Hebrew word. It has no meaning in Hebrew.
diestra has no meaning in Hebrew. This is not a Hebrew word.
But is not a a Hebrew word. The English word But means אבל (aval) in Hebrew.
No. Janah is not a Hebrew word, and the Hebrew word for Paradise comes from the Hebrew word pardess (פרדס) which means "orchard."