Spoilt in a sentence as an adjective

I suspect the real problem isn't that others are bad - Google has spoilt us with how good it is.

It's truly easy to be spoilt by this clicky-shiny web thing.

This could be extremely dangerous as he'll be spoilt rotten.

He thinks that technology has outpaced us, rather spoilt us.

It requires experience to understand that sometimes customers are just trolls spoilt by life and to just let it go.

I spent a short amount of time there and it seemed to be rather spoilt by a contingent of insane and simply unpleasant people.

Mathematicians are spoilt by maths riches of eternal problems.

Maybe I'm too much spoilt with coffeescript, ruby, python and other syntax-sugary languages.

The same effect could be created by just using proper hygienic conditions in the slaughterhouse - but that would cost more and require some spoilt food to be trashed - such as the trimmings from beef.

The tech world needs to understand that this is not how life in most professions works and we are in real danger of turning into spoilt and privileged people that the rest of the world has started seeing us as.

Sometimes they act like spoilt children, especially when they get all sulky and declare themselves out because the entrepreneur wants to negotiate or took too many seconds to decide.

The experience has made me fairly positive of the Oracle product, fairly keen to avoid MongoDB in general, and has also spoiled my experience of MySQL and Postgres since because of features I've been spoilt with.

Thus I don't actually see them in the "spoilt toddler" mode, rather more like an autistic adult person behaving rationally in a world that constantly baffles them because they have a different internal model of its rules.

To be "honest", "different" here means "almost identical to historious, diigo, evernote", etc. There already are plenty of players in the space, but delicious has spoilt users enough that they don't want to pay for these services.

Spoilt definitions

adjective

having the character or disposition harmed by pampering or oversolicitous attention; "a spoiled child"

See also: spoiled

adjective

(of foodstuffs) not in an edible or usable condition; "bad meat"; "a refrigerator full of spoilt food"

See also: spoiled

adjective

affected by blight; anything that mars or prevents growth or prosperity; "a blighted rose"; "blighted urban districts"

See also: blighted