A clean URL is just a URL without a query string. So for example, instead of http://example.com/index.php?page=foo
you might want http://example.com/foo
They can become very complicated for large existing sites that want to move to clean URLs. As Matt H and others said, you can use Apache rewrite to change existing URLs into clean URLs. http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_rewrite.html has the full documentation on mod_rewrite, but you'll probably learn faster from examples. jValdron just posted a decent one. And this answer is quickly becoming a mishmash of faster answers. There is so much documentation for rewrites and handling them with PHP that a question this broad isn't really worth answering again.
If you have a very large site with a lot of php pages that take query strings, you're going to have to plan on either writing a ton of rewrites and making sure your links don't break or a single rewrite to a script that will handle redirecting to the right pages.
If you are making a new site, I'd go with rewriting your URLs to a single script that will get the content according to the URL.
Here is a famous example from Drupal's .htaccess file.
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
RewriteEngine on
# Rewrite URLs of the form 'x' to the form 'index.php?q=x'.
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !=/favicon.ico
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ index.php?q=$1 [L,QSA]
</IfModule>
Then QSA
means query string append and the L
before it means Last Stop the rewriting process immediately and don't apply any more rules.
Then index.php can access the URL with $_GET['q'].