the.com/strips
Long, narrow somethings — or what you do when clothes become optional.
means Either thin, elongated pieces of a material, or the act of removing layers (clothing, paint, dignity).
from From Old English and Germanic roots tied to 'stripe' and the Middle Dutch 'strippe,' meaning a thin band; the verb 'to strip' shares ancestry with 'rob,' which explains a lot.
Comic stripsBorn in 1890s newspapers to sell more papers
Las VegasThe Strip isn't actually in Las Vegas city limits
Test stripsLitmus paper made acid-checking a pocket science