| • | To deprive; to bereave; to make destitute; to plunder;
   especially, to deprive of a covering; to skin; to peel; as, to strip a
   man of his possession, his rights, his privileges, his reputation; to
   strip one of his clothes; to strip a beast of his skin; to strip a tree
   of its bark. | 
											
															| • | To divest of clothing; to uncover. | 
											
															| • | To dismantle; as, to strip a ship of rigging, spars, etc. | 
											
															| • | To pare off the surface of, as land, in strips. | 
											
															| • | To deprive of all milk; to milk dry; to draw the last
   milk from; hence, to milk with a peculiar movement of the hand on the
   teats at the last of a milking; as, to strip a cow. | 
											
															| • | To pass; to get clear of; to outstrip. | 
											
															| • | To pull or tear off, as a covering; to remove; to wrest
   away; as, to strip the skin from a beast; to strip the bark from a
   tree; to strip the clothes from a man's back; to strip away all
   disguisses. | 
											
															| • | To tear off (the thread) from a bolt or nut; as, the
   thread is stripped. | 
											
															| • | To tear off the thread from (a bolt or nut); as, the bolt
   is stripped. | 
											
															| • | To remove the metal coating from (a plated article), as
   by acids or electrolytic action. | 
											
															| • | To remove fiber, flock, or lint from; -- said of the
   teeth of a card when it becomes partly clogged. | 
											
															| • | To pick the cured leaves from the stalks of (tobacco) and
   tie them into "hands"; to remove the midrib from (tobacco leaves). | 
											
															| • | To take off, or become divested of, clothes or covering;
   to undress. | 
											
															| • | To fail in the thread; to lose the thread, as a bolt,
   screw, or nut. See Strip, v. t., 8. | 
											
															| • | A narrow piece, or one comparatively long; as, a strip of
   cloth; a strip of land. | 
											
															| • | A trough for washing ore. | 
											
															| • | The issuing of a projectile from a rifled gun without
   acquiring the spiral motion. |