scoop

scoop — noun

1. a kitchen or serving tool that has a deep, rounded head and a short handle, desi

1.名詞B1
釋義

a kitchen or serving tool that has a deep, rounded head and a short handle, designed to lift soft materials like ice cream, flour, or sugar, and also used for digging into soil or sand.

例句

Quan used an ice-cream scoop to serve dessert to his guests.

collocation: ice-cream scoop

The gardener grabbed a scoop from the shed to fill the flowerpot with soil.

同義詞
  • ladle

    deeper and used for liquids like soup or sauce

  • spatula

    flat and flexible, used for flipping rather than digging

  • shovel

    larger, for digging in earth or moving bulk materials

文法句型

a scoop (of something)

ice-cream scoop

measuring scoop

用法筆記

Countable. Often specified by the substance it holds (e.g. ice-cream scoop, flour scoop). In the United States, a cookie scoop is a common household tool for making uniformly sized cookies.

常見錯誤

He used a scoop spoon to serve the soup.
He used a ladle to serve the soup.
💡A scoop has a deeper, rounder bowl than a ladle and is used for solids or powders, not thin liquids.

2. the amount of a soft substance that fits into a scoop, often used as a serving s

2.名詞B1
釋義

the amount of a soft substance that fits into a scoop, often used as a serving size for ice cream, rice, or pet food.

例句

Caleb asked for two scoops of chocolate ice cream in a waffle cone.

pattern: two scoops of [flavour] ice cream

Each serving of the protein powder is one scoop mixed with water.

pattern: one scoop of [substance]

同義詞
  • serving

    more general term for a portion of food

  • portion

    emphasises the predetermined amount rather than the tool used

文法句型

a scoop of something

two scoops of something

用法筆記

Commonly used with ice cream, powdered supplements, pet food, and baking ingredients. A double scoop usually means two portions in one serving container.

常見錯誤

Please give me a scoop water.
Please give me a scoop of water.
💡The noun scoop requires of before the substance.

3. a news item that one media outlet reports first, before any of its rivals can pu

3.名詞B2
釋義

a news item that one media outlet reports first, before any of its rivals can publish the same story.

例句

The journalist was proud of her scoop on the mayor's secret business deal.

pattern: scoop on [person/event]

Aylin stayed up all night to verify the details before publishing her scoop.

同義詞
  • exclusive

    emphasises that only one outlet has the story

  • sensation

    stronger, suggesting the story causes public excitement or shock

文法句型

a scoop on someone/something

get/have a scoop

用法筆記

Frequently used in journalism contexts. The verb form (to scoop someone) means to publish a story before a rival can. Often preceded by big, exclusive, or major.

4. the most recent and often private details about a person, event, or situation, e

4.名詞B2
釋義

the most recent and often private details about a person, event, or situation, especially information that is not yet widely known by the public.

例句

Ife called her brother to get the scoop on their cousin's wedding plans.

pattern: get the scoop on [event]

Nobody at the office knew the scoop about the manager's sudden resignation.

同義詞
  • inside information

    slightly more formal, can be used in business contexts

  • lowdown

    even more informal, typical of casual American speech

  • dope

    dated slang, rarely used by younger speakers

文法句型

the scoop on someone/something

give someone the scoop

用法筆記

Almost always used with the definite article: the scoop. Frequently followed by on (the scoop on something). Very informal — suitable for conversation but not formal writing.

常見錯誤

Tell me scoop about the party.
Tell me the scoop on the party.
💡Requires the definite article and the preposition on.

5. a rounded, bowl-shaped hollow or cavity left in a surface after a substance has

5.名詞C1
釋義

a rounded, bowl-shaped hollow or cavity left in a surface after a substance has been removed, or naturally formed in the ground or a material.

例句

The archaeologist carefully brushed the dirt from the small scoop in the rock.

Aylin noticed a deep scoop in the sofa cushion where the cat always slept.

pattern: scoop in [surface]

同義詞
  • cavity

    more technical, used in medical or scientific contexts

  • hollow

    more general, not necessarily round

  • indentation

    suggests a mark pressed inward rather than material removed

文法句型

a scoop in/out of something

用法筆記

This sense is far less common than the others. It appears most often in descriptive or technical writing about geology, archaeology, or physical damage to surfaces.

scoop — verb