0 present participle of scoop --
1 to move something with a scoop or with something used as a scoop: --
2 to get a large number of votes or prizes: --
The party is expected to scoop up the majority of the working-class vote.
3 to be the first newspaper to discover and print an important news story: --
In essence, the consultation paper is scooping in nature.
When they started to fish the marks foreign trawlers were immediately on the scene, scooping the fish up.
There is widespread concern about industrial fishing for fishmeal, scooping out immature fish from the sea and damaging the possibilities for regeneration of the stock.
The morphology of the superior bridging leaflet, in contrast, was not influenced by the degree of scooping, and neither was the severity of regurgitation of the atrioventricular valve.
Cases with a milder scooping like (c) had slight left axis deviation or an intermediate axis.
Neither the degree of scooping, nor the morphology of the superior and inferior bridging leaflets, was associated with the severity of regurgitation.
In conclusion, the degree of scooping of the ventricular septum significantly affected the electrocardiographic findings in patients with atrioventricular septal defect and common atrioventricular orifice.
Hearts with a more deficient interventricular septum (scooping) showed marked left axis deviation regardless of the development of the atrial septum (a and b).