strip ۱) نوار؛ ۲ا) لُختاندن، لُختکردن، ۲ب) لُختیدن، لُختشدن 1) navâr; 2a) loxtândan, loxt kardan, 2b) loxtidan, loxt šodan Fr.: 1) bande; 2a) désabiller, décaper, démonter, 2b) se désabiller A long, flat, narrow piece of something.
→ instability strip.
2a) To deprive of covering; to deprive of clothing; make bare or naked.
→ ram pressure stripping.
2b) To take off clothes.
Etymology (EN): 1) M.E. probably from M.L.G. strippe “strap, thong,”
related to stripe.
- M.E. strippe, O.E. *stryppan; cf. M.Du.
stropen “to strip off, to ramble about plundering,” O.H.G.
stroufen “to strip off, plunder,” Ger. streifen
“strip off, to ramble, roam, rove.”
Etymology (PE): 1) Navâr “strip.”
- Loxtândan, acusative of loxtidan, loxt kardan
“to strip, to deprive of,” infinitive of loxt
“naked, deprived of,” variants rut, lut, rud
“plucked, stripped of its feathers (a bird) or of its wool (a lamb);”
cf. Kurd. we-rutin “to pluck, strop off;”
Proto-Ir. *rauH “to pluck, pull out;” IE cognates
Lith. liautis “to be cut off, mutilated;” O.H.G. lô,
E. lye (Cheung 2007).
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