stripping

noun

That which is removed by stripping.

noun

plural The last milk drawn from a cow, procured by a downward stripping action of the thumb and forefinger.

noun

In fish-culture, the operation of pressing ripe spawn or milt out of the live fish.

noun

In quarrying and mining, the act of removing the superficial detritus, soil, etc., preparatory to opening a mine or quarry, or to lay bare the surface for examination; also, the material thus removed.

noun

Same as strip.

noun

In textile-coloring and –finishing, the process of removing color from material either to lighten the tint or to prepare the fabric to receive a different color.

noun

In the preparation of raw silk for use, the removal of sericin or silk-gelatin from the surface of the fibers by working them for a longer or shorter time in soap solutions heated nearly to the boiling-point.

noun

In the manufacture of toilet-soap, the reduction of stock soap in bars to thin ribbons or strips by passage through a slicing-machine and rubbing-rollers. These strips, dried and ground, are afterward compressed into bars or tablets, yielding what is known as milled soap.

noun

In electrotyping, the removal of the wax mold from the copper duplicate it has produced, usually by the agency of heat on an iron table made for this purpose.

noun

In the tobacco industry: The operation of pulling the leaves from the stem and tying them in ‘hands,’ which takes place after drying but for which the material must be damp.