| n. 1.  Medicine   A supportive device, usually a pad with a belt, worn to prevent enlargement of a hernia or the return of a reduced hernia. 2.  a.  A rigid framework, as of wooden beams or metal bars, designed to support a structure, such as a roof. b.  An architectural bracket. 3.  Something gathered into a bundle; a pack. 4.  Nautical   An iron fitting by which a lower yard is secured to a mast. 5.  Botany   A compact cluster of flowers at the end of a stalk. tr.v.  trussed, truss·ing, truss·es  1.  To tie up or bind tightly. 2.  To bind or skewer the wings or legs of (a fowl) before cooking. 3.  To support or brace with a truss. [Middle English trusse, bundle, from Old French trousse, from torser, trousser, to truss, possibly from Vulgar Latin *torsāre, from *torsus, variant of Latin tortus, past participle of torquēre, to twist; see  terkw- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] | 
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