trousseau, n.m., bunch (of keys); ☉small sheaf of arrows; trousseau (of a lady about to be married); outfit (of nuns, school-boarders, etc.); (anat.) fasciculus.
trousse-col, n.m., (—-—s). V. torcol.
trousse-étriers, n.m., (—) stirrup-leather.
trousse-galant, n.m., (n.p.) (fam.) cholera.
trousse-pète, n.f., (—) (pop.) hussy, jade.
trousse-queue, n.m., (—) (man.) tail-case.
troussequin, n.m., cantel, cantle (of a saddle).
trousser, v.a., to tie up, to tuck up, to turn up, to pin up; to truss; to dispatch (business); to hasten. — ses jupes; to tuck up one’s petticoats. — un poulet; to truss a chicken. — baggage or ses guenilles; to make off, to cut one’s sticks, to be off, to hook it, to cut it. — de la besogne; to get through a lot of work (quickly).
se trousser, v.r., to tuck up one’s clothes; to be tucked up.
troussis, n.m., tucking up, tuck.