strip

strip&+{1}
[strɪp]
vb
to take or pull (the covering, clothes, etc) off (oneself, another person, or thing)
to strip a bed
to remove all one's clothes.to perform a striptease
to denude or empty completely
to deprive
he was stripped of his pride
to rob or plunder
to remove (paint, varnish, etc) from (a surface, furniture, etc) by sanding, with a solvent, etc
stripped pine
Also called: pluck to pull out the old coat of hair from (dogs of certain long- and wire-haired breeds)
to remove the leaves from the stalks of (tobacco, etc).to separate the two sides of a leaf from the stem of (tobacco, etc)
to draw the last milk from each of the teats of (a cow)
to dismantle (an engine, mechanism, etc)
to tear off or break (the thread) from (a screw, bolt, etc) or (the teeth) from (a gear)
to remove the accessories from (a motor vehicle)
his car was stripped down
to remove (the most volatile constituent) from (a mixture of liquids) by boiling, evaporation, or distillation
to combine (pieces of film or paper) to form a composite sheet from which a plate can be made
(in freight transport) to unpack (a container)See stuffing and stripping
n
the act or an instance of undressing or of performing a striptease
See strip out
strip

strip&+{2}
[strɪp]
n
a relatively long, flat, narrow piece of something
short for airstrip
a horizontal or vertical row of three or more unseparated postage stamps
the clothes worn by the members of a team, esp a football team
a triple option on a security or commodity consisting of one call option and two put options at the same price and for the same periodSee strap
short for dosing strip
vb
to cut or divide into strips
- 习惯用语
- tear someone off a strip to rebuke (someone) angrily