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Verb edit

loop in (third-person singular simple present loops in, present participle looping in, simple past and past participle looped in)

  1. (transitive) To include in communications about something; to keep informed about something.
    • 2010 January 11, Read Excerpt: Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, ABC News (retrieved 24 April 2013):
      One day late that fall, Clinton summoned James Carville, the architect of Bill's victory in 1992, to her Senate office. Hillary adored James, had no doubt about his allegiance or discretion—although she hadn't looped him in until now.
    • 2011 April 10, Dan Amira, Catherine Coreno, “In Which We Inform Samuel L. Jackson About N-ggerhead”, in New York Magazine Daily Intelligencer, retrieved 24 April 2013:
      [T]he actor still hadn't heard about it. So we looped him in.

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