different between strip vs beam

strip

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: str?p, IPA(key): /st??p/
  • Rhymes: -?p

Etymology 1

From alteration of stripe or from Middle Low German strippe

Noun

strip (chiefly countable, plural strips)

  1. (countable) A long, thin piece of land; any long, thin area.
    The countries were in dispute over the ownership of a strip of desert about 100 metres wide.
  2. (usually countable, sometimes uncountable) A long, thin piece of any material; any such material collectively.
  3. A comic strip.
  4. A landing strip.
  5. A strip steak.
  6. (US) A street with multiple shopping or entertainment possibilities.
  7. (sport of fencing) The playing area, roughly 14 meters by 2 meters.
  8. (Britain, soccer) The uniform of a football team, or the same worn by supporters.
  9. (mining) A trough for washing ore.
  10. The issuing of a projectile from a rifled gun without acquiring the spiral motion.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Farrow to this entry?)
  11. (television) A television series aired at the same time daily (or at least on Mondays to Fridays), so that it appears as a strip straight across the weekly schedule.
Hyponyms
  • (long, thin piece of bacon): rasher
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English strepen, strippen, from Old English str?epan (plunder). Probably related to German Strafe (deprivation, fine, punishment)

Verb

strip (third-person singular simple present strips, present participle stripping, simple past and past participle stripped)

  1. (transitive) To remove or take away, often in strips or stripes.
  2. (usually intransitive) To take off clothing.
    Seeing that no one else was about, he stripped and dived into the river.
  3. (intransitive) To perform a striptease.
    In the seedy club, a group of drunken men were watching a woman stripping.
  4. (transitive) To take away something from (someone or something); to plunder; to divest.
    The athlete was stripped of his medal after failing a drugs test.
    They had stripped the forest bare, with not a tree left standing.
    • They stript Joseph out of his coat.
    • 1856, Eleanor Marx-Aveling (translator), Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary, Part III Chapter XI
      He was obliged to sell his silver piece by piece; next he sold the drawing-room furniture. All the rooms were stripped; but the bedroom, her own room, remained as before.
    • 2013, Paul Harris, Lance Armstrong faces multi-million dollar legal challenges after confession (in The Guardian, 19 January 2013)[4]
      After the confession, the lawsuits. Lance Armstrong's extended appearance on the Oprah Winfrey network, in which the man stripped of seven Tour de France wins finally admitted to doping, has opened him up to several multi-million dollar legal challenges.
  5. (transitive) To remove cargo from (a container).
  6. (transitive) To remove (the thread or teeth) from a screw, nut, or gear, especially inadvertently by overtightening.
    Don't tighten that bolt any more or you'll strip the thread.
    The screw is stripped.
  7. (intransitive) To fail in the thread; to lose the thread, as a bolt, screw, or nut.
  8. (transitive) To remove color from hair, cloth, etc. to prepare it to receive new color.
  9. (transitive, bridge) To remove all cards of a particular suit from another player. (See also strip-squeeze.)
  10. (transitive) To empty (tubing) by applying pressure to the outside of (the tubing) and moving that pressure along (the tubing).
  11. (transitive) To milk a cow, especially by stroking and compressing the teats to draw out the last of the milk.
  12. To press out the ripe roe or milt from fishes, for artificial fecundation.
  13. (television, transitive) To run a television series at the same time daily (or at least on Mondays to Fridays), so that it appears as a strip straight across the weekly schedule.
  14. (transitive, agriculture) To pare off the surface of (land) in strips.
  15. (transitive) To remove the overlying earth from (a deposit).
  16. (transitive, obsolete) To pass; to get clear of; to outstrip.
    • 1618, Georege Chapman, A Hymn to Apollo
      when first they stripp'd the Malean promontory
    • Before he reached it he was out of breath, / And then the other stript him.
  17. To remove the metal coating from (a plated article), as by acids or electrolytic action.
  18. To remove fibre, flock, or lint from; said of the teeth of a card when it becomes partly clogged.
  19. To pick the cured leaves from the stalks of (tobacco) and tie them into "hands".
  20. To remove the midrib from (tobacco leaves).
Conjugation
Quotations
  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:strip.
Synonyms
  • deprive
  • peel
  • uncover
Derived terms
Translations

Noun

strip (plural strips)

  1. The act of removing one's clothes; a striptease.
    She stood up on the table and did a strip.
  2. (attributively, of games) Denotes a version of a game in which losing players must progressively remove their clothes.
    strip poker; strip Scrabble
    • 1980, Victor Miller, Friday the 13th (film)
      We're going to play Strip Monopoly.
    • 20 May 2018, Hadley Freeman in The Guardian, Is Meghan Markle the American the royals have needed all along?
      What was going to happen to this cheeky boy, suddenly deprived of his fun-loving mother, and left with his cold father who barely touched him at her funeral? For a long time – a Nazi uniform here, a game of strip billiards there – it looked like the answer was: nothing good.
Derived terms
  • strip poker
Translations
References
  • OED 2nd edition 1989
  • Funk&Wagnalls Standard College Dictionary

Further reading

  • strip on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Strip in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)

Anagrams

  • TRIPS, spirt, sprit, stirp, trips

Dutch

Etymology

From English strip.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?p

Noun

strip m (plural strips, diminutive stripje n)

  1. strip (long thin piece)
  2. comic (a cartoon story)

Synonyms

  • (strip): strook
  • (comic): beeldverhaal

Derived terms

  • striptekenaar

Verb

strip

  1. first-person singular present indicative of strippen
  2. imperative of strippen

Portuguese

Noun

strip m (plural strips)

  1. Abbreviation of striptease.

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

From English strip.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /strîp/

Noun

str?p m (Cyrillic spelling ??????)

  1. comic (a cartoon story)

Declension

strip From the web:

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beam

English

Etymology

From Middle English beem, from Old English b?am (tree, cross, gallows, column, pillar, wood, beam, splint, post, stock, rafter, piece of wood), from Proto-Germanic *baumaz (tree, beam, balk), from Proto-Indo-European *b?ew- (to grow, swell). Cognate with West Frisian beam (tree), Saterland Frisian Boom (tree), Dutch boom (tree), German Low German Boom (tree), German Baum (tree), Luxembourgish Bam (tree), Albanian bimë (a plant). Doublet of boom.

The verb is from Middle English bemen, from Old English b?amian (to shine, to cast forth rays or beams of light), from the noun.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: b?m, IPA(key): /bi?m/
  • Rhymes: -i?m

Noun

beam (plural beams)

  1. Any large piece of timber or iron long in proportion to its thickness, and prepared for use.
    • And a letter vnto Asaph the keeper of the kings forrest, that he may giue me timber to make beames for the gates of the palace which appertained to the house, and for the wall of the Citie, and for the house that I shall enter into: And the king granted me, according to the good hand of my God vpon me.
  2. One of the principal horizontal structural members, usually of timber or concrete, of a building; one of the transverse members of a ship's frame on which the decks are laid — supported at the sides by knees in wooden ships and by stringers in steel ones.
    • 1905, Beatrix Potter, The Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle
      Lucie opened the door: and what do you think there was inside the hill?—a nice clean kitchen with a flagged floor and wooden beams—just like any other farm kitchen.
  3. (nautical) The maximum width of a vessel (note that a vessel with a beam of 15 foot can also be said to be 15 foot abeam)
    Synonym: breadth
    • 1892, Sydney Marow Eardley-Wilmot, The Development of Navies During the Last Half-Century Chapter 7
      Being only 280 ft. long, with a beam of 66 ft, their speed is moderate, and for a long time difficulty was experienced in steering them.
  4. The crossbar of a mechanical balance, from the ends of which the scales are suspended.
  5. The principal stem of the antler of a deer.
  6. (literary) The pole of a carriage or chariot.
  7. (textiles) A cylinder of wood, making part of a loom, on which weavers wind the warp before weaving and the cylinder on which the cloth is rolled, as it is woven.
  8. The straight part or shank of an anchor.
  9. The central bar of a plow, to which the handles and colter are secured, and to the end of which are attached the oxen or horses that draw it.
  10. In steam engines, a heavy iron lever having an oscillating motion on a central axis, one end of which is connected with the piston rod from which it receives motion, and the other with the crank of the wheel shaft.
    Synonyms: working beam, walking beam
  11. A ray or collection of approximately parallel rays emitted from the sun or other luminous body.
    a beam of light
    a beam of energy
  12. (figuratively) A ray; a gleam.
    a beam of hope, or of comfort
  13. One of the long feathers in the wing of a hawk.
    Synonym: beam feather
  14. (music) A horizontal bar which connects the stems of two or more notes to group them and to indicate metric value.
  15. (railway) An elevated rectangular dirt pile used to cheaply build an elevated portion of a railway.

Hyponyms

  • (textiles): fore beam, back beam

See also

  • Thesaurus:stick

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

beam (third-person singular simple present beams, present participle beaming, simple past and past participle beamed)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To emit beams of light; shine; radiate.
    to beam forth light
  2. (intransitive, figuratively) To smile broadly or especially cheerfully.
  3. (transitive) To furnish or supply with beams
  4. (transitive) To give the appearance of beams to.
  5. (transitive, science fiction) To transmit matter or information via a high-tech wireless mechanism.
    Beam me up, Scotty; there's no intelligent life down here.
    The injured crewmembers were immediately beamed to sickbay.
  6. (transitive, currying) To stretch something (for example an animal hide) on a beam.
  7. (transitive, weaving) To put (something) on a beam
  8. (transitive, music) To connect (musical notes) with a beam, or thick line, in music notation.

Translations

Anagrams

  • BAME, Bame, Mabe, ambe, bema, mabe

German

Verb

beam

  1. singular imperative of beamen

Old English

Alternative forms

  • beom

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *baum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bæ???m/

Noun

b?am m (nominative plural b?amas)

  1. tree
    Synonyms: tr?ow, wudu
  2. beam of wood
    Synonym: bord
    1. gallows, gibbet (hanging device with a crossbeam)
      Synonym: ?ealga
    2. (by extension) the Cross
      • Codex Vercillensis

Declension

Derived terms

  • si?eb?am

Descendants

  • Middle English: beem
    • Scots: beme
    • English: beam
      • ? German: beamen
      • ? Japanese: ???

Romanian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [be?am]

Verb

beam

  1. first-person singular imperfect indicative of bea
  2. first-person plural imperfect indicative of bea

West Frisian

Etymology

From Old Frisian b?m, from Proto-West Germanic *baum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /b???m/

Noun

beam c (plural beammen, diminutive beamke)

  1. tree

Derived terms

  • hefbeam

Further reading

  • “beam”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011

beam From the web:

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  • what beam angle do i need
  • what beam pattern for ditch lights
  • what beam can be reflected
  • what beamer means
  • what beam is used in women's gymnastics
  • what beams to use at night
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