A low, vulgar state.
A prepared channel in a surface, especially at the side of a road adjacent to a curb, intended for the drainage of water.
A duct or channel beneath the eaves of a building to carry rain water; eavestrough.
A groove down the sides of a bowling lane.
A ditch along the side of a road.
Any narrow channel or groove, such as one formed by erosion in the vent of a gun from repeated firing.
A space between printed columns of text.
An unprinted space between rows of stamps.
A large groove (commonly behind animals) in a barn used for the collection and removal of animal excrement.
One of a number of pieces of wood or metal, grooved in the centre, used to separate the pages of type in a form.
A drainage channel.
The notional locus of things, acts, or events which are distasteful, ill bred or morally questionable.
The spaces between comic book panels.
One who or that which guts.
To flow or stream; to form gutters.
To flicker as if about to be extinguished.
To melt away by having the molten wax run down along the side of the candle.
To cut or form into small longitudinal hollows; to channel.
To send (a bowling ball) into the gutter, not hitting any pins.
To supply with a gutter or gutters.
Now more specifically, a state of having few or no clothes on.
Partial or informal dress for women, as worn in the home rather than in public.
Informal clothing for men, as opposed to formal or ceremonial wear.
To remove the clothing of (someone).
To remove one's clothing.
To remove one’s clothing.
To strip of something.
To take the dressing, or covering, from.