English

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Noun

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inside scoop (countable and uncountable, plural inside scoops)

  1. (informal, idiomatic) The newest, exclusive, or even confidential information on someone or something, especially when it is not typically well-known or accessible to the general public.
    • 1952, Patients in the Iowa State Sanitorium for Treatment of Tuberculosis at Oakdale, Iowa (publisher), The Iowa Stethoscope - Volumes 30-31, page 24:
      I welcome the opportunity to give you the inside scoop on the raunchiest crew of lungers who ever rode a mattress.
    • 1954, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy Department (publisher), Monthly Newsletter - Volume 18, page 31:
      Whether you have heard of the center or not, or taken some of its courses, you may be interested in getting some of the inside scoop.
    • 1969, New York Magazine, page 42:
      Having spent weeks talking to middle-class pot-smokers (over 30) all around the city, I traveled to the tip of Manhattan for the inside scoop from the Federal Bureau of Narcotics & Dangerous Drugs.
    • 1974, Ebony Magazine, page 123:
      A lot of young men are getting the inside scoop about the Air Force Academy from the outside.