scoop

英 [skuːp] 美 [skup]
  • vt. 掘;舀取;抢先获得;搜集
  • n. 勺;铲子;独家新闻;凹处
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scoop
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1. shove => shovel => scoop.
2. 形近区别:stoop, swoop, scoop.
3. 独家新闻: American English, from earlier commercial slang verbal sense of "appropriate so as to exclude competitors".
4. 谐音“是锅瓢”。
scoop 勺,铲子,抢先报道,独家新闻

来自中古荷兰语 schope,舀水桶,来自 West Germanic*skopo,容器,来自 PIE*skep,切,分开, 词源同 ship,shape.引申词义勺,铲子等,引申比喻义抢先报道,独家新闻。

scoop
scoop: [14] Scoop appears to go back ultimately to a prehistoric Germanic base *skap- which originally denoted ‘chop or dig out’ (it was later extended metaphorically to ‘form’, and in that sense has given English shape). It had a variant form *skōp-, amongst whose derivatives was West Germanic *skōpō. This evolved into Middle Dutch and Middle Low German schōpe, which was used for the bucket of a dredge, water-wheel, etc, and English borrowed it early in the 14th century. The journalistic sense ‘story’ reported in advance of competitors’ emerged in the USA in the 1870s.
=> shape
scoop (v.)
mid-14c., "to bail out," from scoop (n.) and from Low German scheppen "to draw water," from Proto-Germanic *skuppon (cognates: Old Saxon skeppian, Dutch scheppen, Old High German scaphan, German schöpfen "to scoop, ladle out"), from PIE root *skeubh- (cognates: Old English sceofl "shovel," Old Saxon skufla; see shove (v.)). In the journalistic sense from 1884. Related: Scooped; scooping.
scoop (n.)
early 14c., "utensil for bailing out," from Middle Dutch schope "bucket for bailing water," from West Germanic *skopo (cognates: Middle Low German schope "ladle"), from Proto-Germanic *skop-, from PIE *(s)kep- "to cut, to scrape, to hack" (see scabies). Also from Middle Dutch schoepe "a scoop, shovel" (Dutch schop "a spade," related to German Schüppe "a shovel," also "a spade at cards").

Meaning "action of scooping" is from 1742; that of "amount in a scoop" is from 1832. Sense of "a big haul, as if in a scoop net" is from 1893. The journalistic sense of "news published before a rival" is first recorded 1874, American English, from earlier commercial slang verbal sense of "appropriate so as to exclude competitors" (c. 1850).
1. She gave him an extra scoop of clotted cream.
她多给他加了一勺浓缩奶油。

来自柯林斯例句

2. Scoop the blanket weed out and use it to line hanging baskets.
把那些丝状水藻捞出来,垫在吊篮里。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Prying off the plastic lid, she took out a small scoop.
她揭开塑料盖,拿出了一个小勺。

来自柯林斯例句

4. All the newspapers really want to do is scoop the opposition.
所有报社真正想做的就是比对手抢先报道。

来自柯林斯例句

5. Cut a marrow in half and scoop out the seeds.
把一个西葫芦切成两半,挖出种子。

来自柯林斯例句