different between scoop vs drott

scoop

English

Etymology

From Middle English scope, schoupe, a borrowing from Middle Dutch scoep, scuep, schope, schoepe (bucket for bailing water) and Middle Dutch schoppe, scoppe, schuppe ("a scoop, shovel"; > Modern Dutch schop (spade)), from Proto-Germanic *skupp?, *skuppij?, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kep- (to cut, to scrape, to hack)..

Cognate with Old Frisian skuppe (shovel), Middle Low German sch?pe (scoop, shovel), German Low German Schüppe, Schüpp (shovel), German Schüppe, Schippe (shovel, spade). Related to English shovel.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: sko?op, IPA(key): /sku?p/
  • Rhymes: -u?p

Noun

scoop (plural scoops)

  1. Any cup- or bowl-shaped tool, usually with a handle, used to lift and move loose or soft solid material.
  2. The amount or volume of loose or solid material held by a particular scoop.
  3. The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shovelling.
  4. A story or fact; especially, news learned and reported before anyone else.
  5. (automotive) An opening in a hood/bonnet or other body panel to admit air, usually for cooling the engine.
  6. The digging attachment on a front-end loader.
  7. A place hollowed out; a basinlike cavity; a hollow.
    • 1819, Joseph Rodman Drake, The Culprit Fay
      Some had lain in the scoop of the rock.
  8. A spoon-shaped surgical instrument, used in extracting certain substances or foreign bodies.
  9. A special spinal board used by emergency medical service staff that divides laterally to scoop up patients.
  10. A sweep; a stroke; a swoop.
  11. (Scotland) The peak of a cap.
  12. (pinball) A hole on the playfield that catches a ball, but eventually returns it to play in one way or another.

Synonyms

  • (tool): scooper
  • (amount held by a scoop): scoopful

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

scoop (third-person singular simple present scoops, present participle scooping, simple past and past participle scooped)

  1. (transitive) To lift, move, or collect with a scoop or as though with a scoop.
  2. (transitive) To make hollow; to dig out.
  3. (transitive) To report on something, especially something worthy of a news article, before (someone else).
  4. (music, often with "up") To begin a vocal note slightly below the target pitch and then to slide up to the target pitch, especially in country music.
  5. (slang) To pick (someone) up

Derived terms

Translations

References

Anagrams

  • Co-ops, Coops, POCOs, co-ops, coops

French

Etymology

Borrowed from English scoop.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /skup/

Noun

scoop m (plural scoops)

  1. scoop (news learned and reported before anyone else)

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from English scoop. Compare scoprire (uncover), scoperta (discovery).

Noun

scoop m (invariable)

  1. scoop (news learned and reported before anyone else)

Anagrams

  • scopo, scopò

scoop From the web:

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drott

English

Etymology

From the name of the Drott Manufacturing Company, founded by Edward Drott in 1916.

Noun

drott (plural drotts)

  1. An earthmoving machine similar to a bulldozer, but with a front bucket that can be used for scooping and lifting soil, rather than merely pushing it.
    • 1969, Nan Bowie, Mick Bowie: the Hermitage Years (page 158)
      The drivers of bulldozers, drotts, and other types of mechanical shovels worked long hours in appalling weather.

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse dróttinn

Noun

drott m (definite singular drotten, indefinite plural drotter, definite plural drottene)

  1. (archaic) lord

References

  • “drott” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Old Norse dróttinn

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dr?t?/

Noun

drott m (definite singular drotten, indefinite plural drottar, definite plural drottane)

  1. (archaic) lord

References

  • “drott” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

Swedish

Alternative forms

  • drotte
  • drotten (very rare)

Etymology

From Old Swedish drotin (with -in interpreted as the definite suffix), from Old Norse dróttinn, from Proto-Germanic *druhtinaz. Related to dryg (lasting, heavy).

Noun

drott c

  1. (archaic) king, ruler
  2. (archaic) lord; nobility just below the king

Declension

This table shows modern forms. Until the 19th century the plural could be formed with -er instead of -ar.

References

  • drott in Svenska Akademiens ordbok (SAOB)

drott From the web:

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  • what does rotten mean
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