Verb
strip out (third-person singular simple present strips out, present participle stripping out, simple past and past participle stripped out)
(transitive) To remove (a part from a machine).
Mothers send strips to daughters to make a point. Daughters smack strips down on the breakfast table to make a point. My own mom sometimes cuts a strip out and sends it to me to make sure I understand her. Cathy Guisewite
But the fact is if you strip out the cost of recompensing the public for ripping them off all those years ago on their PPI, the figures aren’t at all bad. Source: Internet
Donald Trump spent 2016 flirting with patriot organizations, particularly around the issue of federal land management, and this is something he began to own up to as he attempts to strip out environmental land protections. Source: Internet
There is no way a post-EU economy like ours could ever afford to chuck away a fifth of our net trading volume during what is (if you strip out the bonkers QE element) a global slump likely to exceed that of 1929. Source: Internet
But Porsche reckons that power claim is conservative, and the car actually makes 523bhp – strip out air restrictors and so on for track use and you’ve got 600bhp right there. Source: Internet
Instead, strip out navigational actions from sub-routines and in the primary routine, call the sub-routine THEN create the action for navigation. Source: Internet