Trussed in a sentence as an adjective

Here's a hint - I trussed natd while it was running. Ooops.

I hope to see more open source project based on trussed flourish.

Each frays come posed up on my screen Eye trussed too bee a joule. The chequer pours o'er every word Two cheque sum spelling rule.

I severely doubt that, given the complexity of trussed bridge designs [0]. There's a lot more to it than how much weight a 4-by-4 can support.

The difference is knowing how to build a Spandrel braced arch and knowing why you would use it instead of a trussed arch.

Other examples of this might be aluminum truss used in staging and the use of trussed steel in bridge building. What is a material?

The “dock” for her trial was a rusty length of corrugated roofing, upon which she was displayed trussed and helpless."

Not the trussed up, constraining taffeta monstrosities David Lynch had them squeezed into. They were about as far from the word 'robe' as you can possibly get and still be clothing.

Un-trussed and baked uncovered at 325 convection. Put BBQ remote temperature probes into breast and thigh.

The axle and the handle get the largest amount of stress, so they remain steel, while the body of the cart can be a trussed plastic mold to achieve the strength needed. Portable gas cans are another area where plastic wins in my book.

It says that the foxes no longer care about the farmer when they're raiding the hen-house because they know he's trussed up and unable to retaliate.

I get what you're saying about trussed steel, but I think that's really just getting at the point that categorical distinctions are rarely cut-and-dry.

Safety is not worth the indignity of driving around trussed up like a turkey." BTW, the government and the courts agree that warrantless snooping is dangerous, which is why there are checks and balances in place.

I get excited over large trussed structures, but cheap handheld medical scanners which don't require an expert operator are going to do more to relieve human suffering. I'd love to see more innovation - but in spite of everything, there's more today than ever before.

Also, while the construction improvements in the past 30 years may not be major, framed-tube and trussed-tube construction will be 50 years old next year. You may be right that we have currently reached the pinnacle of technology, and that nothing else is possible except in the fields of iPhone games and social dating sites.

> Here's a great way to reformulate the morality of the matter in your mind: if you knew that all you were buying were $2 plastic sunglasses from China trussed up with European brand name to look high-end and high-quality, would you still be happy spending $100? Let me answer your hypothetical with a real example: Generic prescription eyeglasses cost $15 on Zenni.

Here's a great way to reformulate the morality of the matter in your mind: if you knew that all you were buying were $2 plastic sunglasses from China trussed up with European brand name to look high-end and high-quality, would you still be happy spending $100?

>Ditch the heavy, traditional, body-on-frame, and rethink the structure as weight-efficient trussed bridge in its simplest load-spreading configuration: a triangle set on its hypotenuse. One side is the Cybertruck's wedgy cab, the other, its tapered, sail-sided bed, their meeting point at the truck's tall peak resulting in a huge cross-sectional area for maximum stiffness.

Since it's always easier to add rules rather than remove them, a poorly managed organisation can find itself trussed up tightly in these rules and an all around rubbish place to work where everything takes forever. While that covers the prevalence of rules such as "no SQL statement may update >1 row", you also ask why people may tend not to use features such as referential integrity in avant garde databases such as Spanner et al. Personally, I would avoid using such features if only because they are so challenging to engineer and are likely to contain bugs for a few months or years as they are bedded in.

Trussed definitions

adjective

bound or secured closely; "the guard was found trussed up with his arms and legs securely tied"; "a trussed chicken"

See also: tied