An instance of plucking or pulling sharply.
Guts, nerve, fortitude or persistence.
The lungs, heart with trachea and often oesophagus removed from slaughtered animals.
Cheap wine.
To take or remove (someone) quickly from a particular place or situation.
To pull something sharply; to pull something out
To pull or twitch sharply.
To remove feathers from a bird.
To play a string instrument pizzicato.
To gently play a single string, e.g. on a guitar, violin etc.
Of a glacier: to transport individual pieces of bedrock by means of gradual erosion through freezing and thawing.
The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shovelling.
Any cup- or bowl-shaped tool, usually with a handle, used to lift and move loose or soft solid material.
An opening in a hood/bonnet or other body panel to admit air, usually for cooling the engine.
A place hollowed out; a basinlike cavity; a hollow.
A spoon-shaped surgical instrument, used in extracting certain substances or foreign bodies.
A sweep; a stroke; a swoop.
A hole on the playfield that catches a ball, but eventually returns it to play in one way or another.
A story or fact; especially, news learned and reported before anyone else.
A special spinal board used by emergency medical service staff that divides laterally to scoop up patients.
The raised end of a surfboard.
The digging attachment on a front-end loader.
The amount or volume of loose or solid material held by a particular scoop.
The peak of a cap.
A kind of floodlight with a reflector.
To pick (someone) up
To report on something, especially something worthy of a news article, before (someone else).
To lift, move, or collect with a scoop or as though with a scoop.
To make hollow; to dig out.
To begin a vocal note slightly below the target pitch and then to slide up to the target pitch, especially in country music.