Characters remaining: 500/500
Translation

scoop out

Academic
Friendly
Explanation of "Scoop Out"

Definition:
"Scoop out" is a verb phrase that means to remove something from a container or a solid object using a tool or your hands, often in a curved or circular motion. It’s like taking out the inside of something.

Usage Instructions:
  • You can use "scoop out" when you want to describe the action of taking something out of a container, like ice cream, or hollowing out something, like a fruit or vegetable.
  • Remember that "scoop" refers to the tool (like a spoon or a small shovel) or the action of taking something out.
Examples:
  1. Cooking: "I will scoop out the seeds from the pumpkin before we carve it."
  2. Food Preparation: "Can you scoop out some ice cream for dessert?"
  3. Gardening: "We need to scoop out the soil to plant the flowers."
Advanced Usage:
  • In a more advanced context, "scoop out" can refer to the process of extracting information or content from a source, such as "scooping out" the main ideas from a long article.
Word Variants:
  • Scoop (noun): The tool used to remove something (e.g., a scoop of ice cream).
  • Scooper (noun): A person or tool that scoops.
Different Meanings:
  • "Scoop" can also mean to gather quickly or to take an exclusive story in journalism, but in "scoop out," it specifically relates to removing something.
Synonyms:
  • Remove
  • Hollow out
  • Extract
  • Dig out
Idioms and Phrasal Verbs:
  • Scoop up: To gather quickly or take hold of something, as in, "He scooped up all the toys before bedtime."
  • Scoop (as an idiom): Can refer to exclusive news, e.g., "The newspaper got the scoop on the big event."
Summary:

"Scoop out" is a versatile phrase used mainly in cooking and food preparation but can also apply to other contexts where something is being removed or extracted.

Verb
  1. take out or up with or as if with a scoop
    • scoop the sugar out of the container
  2. hollow out with a scoop
    • scoop out a melon

Comments and discussion on the word "scoop out"