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Answer for the clue "Bacon bit ", 5 letters:
strip

Alternative clues for the word strip

Word definitions for strip in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Strip \Strip\, v. i. To take off, or become divested of, clothes or covering; to undress. (Mach.) To fail in the thread; to lose the thread, as a bolt, screw, or nut. See Strip , v. t., 8.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Strip was a short-lived comics anthology published by Marvel UK in 1990. It ran for 20 issues (February - November 1990) and featured work by many British comics creators, including Alan Grant , Ian Gibson , Pat Mills , Kevin O'Neill , Si Spencer and John ...

Usage examples of strip.

The Agronomy and Domestic Maintenance divisions wanted to keep all the buildings in one neat and tidy strip.

Across the chamber, stripped of his state collar and muffled under the half-shucked folds of the alizarin and gold ducal surcoat, Bransian launched into interrogation.

G stripped away the covering of softer rock, exposing the core and depositing alluvial metal deposits extensively in the area.

Intellectual-Principle, treating them as impressions of reality upon it: we cannot strip it of truth and so make its objects unknowable and non-existent and in the end annul the Intellectual-Principle itself.

I strip down and I grab my anther and I shake it and I shake it and I.

I was now rather good at knot tying and suturing, by virtue of having forced my way into several operations, including three hernias, a couple of hemorrhoids, an appendectomy, and a vein stripping.

Stripping away the last of his clothing, he examined the appendectomy scar on his lower right side.

The t-shirt had a cracked and fading picture of Kanu on it, the Nigerian foot baller in Arsenal strip.

The actinic flare of outraged nerves reamed her through, then became stripped of meaning by the bared lash of her will.

We also saw on our way the trunk of a tree barked in long strips and splintered deeply.

Everett Everett Barr passed the portentous strip of photographic paper around for examination.

He stripped again and waded the channel, dressed in the thickets of the batture, and climbed the steep clay bank, to stand with the cold steady wind flapping and pulling at his clothing, looking down over the dark green acres of cane in the heatless light.

A few coins fell out, then a small, bedraggled, multicoloured knot of cloth strips, followed by a lone dark, smooth pebble.

The real purpose of the strip was to help beltless trousers stay up by providing a friction grip against a tucked-in shirt.

His goal was the inn, and he had been advised in Berwick to cross the Yonder by what was known as the Roman Brig, and then to bend right through a firwood, to cross a strip of moor, to traverse the village of Yonder, and so find the inn a mile beyond on the hill above the stream.