From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdenudede‧nude /dɪˈnjuːd $ dɪˈnuːd/ verb [transitive] formal 1 REMOVEto remove the plants and trees that cover an area of land a hillside denuded in a fire2 to take something away from someone or somethingdenude somebody/something of something The fact that people have left farm work has denuded many villages of their working populations. —denudation /ˌdiːnjuːˈdeɪʃən $ -nuː-/ noun [uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
denude• The price of coal and kerosene is rising rapidly, and the forests are being denuded.• Successful cloning of the cactus could be used for revegetation of desert denuded by fire or development.• The next day we were taken to visit a Kabari camel herd out in those wild and lovely but denuded hills.• The area to be denuded is first waxed, after which the laser goes into the follicles to destroy them.• Local government will correspondingly be denuded of services accepted by local authorities in other systems.• They were unclothed and denuded of their wigs.• While ploughs are clearing land, expanding livestock populations are denuding the land of vegetation.