brassiere - meaning and definition. What is brassiere
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What (who) is brassiere - definition

UNDERGARMENT FOR SUPPORTING, PROMOTING/CONCEALING AND CONFINING BREAST MOVEMENT
Pregnancy bra; Demibra; Full support bras; Full Support Bras; Over-the-shoulder boulder holder; Training Bras; Bra (undergarment); Bra's; Brassière or bra; Bra wire; Brassieres; Brassire; Razorback bras; Braissere; Brassiere; Brassière; Brasierre; Brassierre
  • Bra extension for the band
  • Bra shirt with built-in breast support (on left), 2015
  • Selection of bras in [[Cairo]], Egypt, 2013
  • [[Venus]] or [[Aphrodite]] prepares to put on an ''apodesmos'', bronze statuette, 0-400 CE
  • Back view and front view of [[sports bra]]s worn by US [[beach volleyball]] players
  • Swimsuit sports bra
  • Roman women wearing breast-bands during sport, [[Villa Romana del Casale]], Sicily, 4th century AD
  • 1958 illustration of how to measure cup and band size
  • "Breast Supporter" c. 1893
  • A seamstress sews a bra in Puerto Rico

Brassiere         
·add. ·noun A form of woman's underwaist stiffened with whalebones, or the like, and worn to support the breasts.
brassiere         
(brassieres)
A brassiere is the same as a bra
. (OLD-FASHIONED)
N-COUNT
brassiere         
['braz??, 'braz??:]
¦ noun full form of bra.
Origin
early 20th cent.: from Fr., lit. 'bodice, child's vest'.

Wikipedia

Bra

A bra, short for brassiere or brassière (US: , UK: or ; French: [bʁasjɛʁ]), is a form-fitting undergarment that is primarily used to support and cover women's breasts. A typical bra consists of a chest band that wraps around the torso, supporting two breast cups that are held in place by shoulder straps. A bra usually fastens in the back, using a hook and eye fastener, although bras are available in a large range of styles and sizes, including front-fastening and backless designs. Some bras are designed for specific functions, such as nursing bras to facilitate breastfeeding or sports bras to minimize discomfort during exercise.

Although women in ancient Greece and Rome wore garments to support their breasts, the first modern bra is attributed to 19-year-old Mary Phelps Jacob (later and better known as the New York publisher and activist Caresse Crosby) who created the garment in 1913 by using two handkerchiefs and some ribbon. After patenting her design in 1914, she briefly manufactured bras at a two-woman factory in Boston before selling her patent to the Warner Brothers Corset Company, which began mass-producing the garment. The bra gained widespread adoption during the first half of the twentieth century, when it largely replaced the corset. The majority of Western women today wear bras, with a minority choosing to go braless. Bra manufacturing and retailing are key components of the multi-billion-dollar global lingerie industry.

Examples of use of brassiere
1. "Brassiere designers will have the ability directly to assess the effects of changes to each brassiere component on vertical breast and brassiere motion using fabric sensors." Share this article: What is this?
2. "Our results show that the fabric sensors are suitable to monitor breast motion and brassiere function.
3. He raced onto the stage and stuffed bills in Maridalia‘s brassiere.
4. Reporting their findings in the latest issue of the Journal of Biomechanics, they say: "A consequence of current brassiere design is that the brassiere straps bear much of the load generated by breast momentum during physical activity.
5. But in one tape she reveals she was lying on my bed in just my brassiere.