How To Use Brim In A Sentence

  • The speech was brimming with ideas for rewarding work and reducing dependency. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Chief Inspector has suggested a complete overhaul of the good book, reducing it to a pacier 250 pages, a greater focus on “Floods and brimstone and other cool stuff” and a possible rewrite by Dan Brown to “Sex the whole thing up a bit.” Archive 2008-10-01
  • Saturday morning came, and all the summer world was bright and fresh, and brimming with life.
  • Most, however, returned home, brimming over with plunder.
  • Finally we were outside and he was walking beside me in his favourite cloak that made him look like a captain, something he had always wanted to be and his wide brimmed hat with the feather plume.
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  • So maybe you'll get what we call a titty brim," said Tommy Bryant, a veteran north Florida bass and panfish guide, grinning. Spring Tactics for Big Bluegill from Field and Stream's John Merwin
  • His portraits often show his subjects brimming with youthful idealism and naivety; touchingly eager for fame, rather than sullied by it. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is only so long you can ignore that kind of behaviour, even knowing that the little blighter has a bowl filled to the brim with tasty kitty treats in the kitchen.
  • She filled each glass to the brim.
  • Brimstone's ship was violently rocked by the explosions, but still managed to maintain their shields.
  • He had almost finished this particular cow and the bucket was full almost to the brim, in fact some of the deep froth (the sign of a good milker) was almost but not quite spilling over.
  • These include the pitcher plants of the Asian tropics, known as Nepenthes, which resemble jugs brimming with nectar—or perhaps more accurately, mouths slavering with drool.
  • (the word brimstone or sulphur explains the character of the fire). Pulpit Pimps
  • His portraits often show his subjects brimming with youthful idealism and naivety; touchingly eager for fame, rather than sullied by it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only prob. is I can't carry anything above my pack without it whacking the brim, hardly. Fishing hats...
  • Bob Walker said the Brimble Hill School would be able to do things he had never dreamed of after receiving the donation from local firm Arval Ltd.
  • The truth is that this region is brimming with self-confidence - and with good reason.
  • At one stage he seemed to become almost as well-known for his flamboyant dress sense - the wide-brimmed hats, the peroxide hair, the big owlish glasses - as for his paintings.
  • Just then, her bleary eyed, pajamaed husband Wilford Brimley walks in with a plate of pie. Y’all need backup? | clusterflock
  • However, this doesn't square with Brimelow's worldview, so he ignores it.
  • Demonstration 1. Fill the transparent container to the brim with marbles.
  • Then the image of a depression-era preacher and his message of Hell-fire and brimstone.
  • The message boards of websites for expats brim with anguished questions on the practicalities of returning home. Times, Sunday Times
  • When you refill your tank, make sure it's full to the brim. Times, Sunday Times
  • Substantial, wholesome, and clean -- though generated by a wet, helpless creature having no personal charms, and which, having passed the phase of life in which it enjoyed the gift of locomotion, has become a plant-like fixture to one spot -- the gas mingles with other diffusions of the reef, recalling villanous salt-petre and sheepdips and brimstone and treacle to the stimulation of the mental faculties generally. My Tropic Isle
  • I was brimming with hopes for obtaining a good liberal arts education, then training in journalism.
  • In the far right corner there was a bookshelf stuffed to the brim with books on history and folklore and legends.
  • At the scene of her first fender-bender -- in Altadena -- she emerged from her little coupe with dark glasses, chignon and wide-brimmed hat all firmly in place. Elizabeth Boleman-Herring: Selling Mother's Louis Vuittons on eBay
  • The pages brim with incisive descriptions and exquisite pictures of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, Chile and Patagonia.
  • Why, the old Peer, pox of his tough constitution, (for that malady would have helped him on,) has made shift by fire and brimstone, and the devil knows what, to force the gout to quit the counterscarp of his stomach, just as it had collected all its strength, in order to storm the citadel of his heart. Clarissa Harlowe
  • It's not a particularly bright colour, nothing like the sunshine intensity of gorse, or a male brimstone's wings, not even as showy as the palest daffodil. Country diary: Claxton, Norfolk
  • How to do this when I wasn't exactly brimming over with information?
  • Wolves were brimming with confidence after back-to-back wins. The Sun
  • The Prime Minister remains brimful of hope.
  • The team is brimful of confidence after their win last week.
  • Men dress as charros, or Mexican cowboys, and wear wide-brimmed sombreros along with tailored jackets and pants lined with silver or shining metal buttons.
  • And now, when you have pledged my uncle, who threatens you with what he calls a brimmer, I will tell you what you think of me. '' Rob Roy
  • Immediately opposite was a grotesque figure of Satan, no doubt in canonicals also, with cloven foot and horns, belching out fire and brimstone on the terrified audience.
  • I reckon," he continued, solemnly, peering at the other from under his rusty hat-brim, "I reckon when you see him, maybe you'll want to put a kind of codicil to that deed to the 'Herald.' The Gentleman from Indiana
  • Having done this, she gave the sand and water a rotatory motion, so as to make a part of the sand and water fly over the brim of the calabash. The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa, in the Year 1805
  • The pit is very deep and is always filled to the brim with leaves.
  • I was unwillingly compelled to take pleasure in the first hour and a half of the descent from the top of the Lukmanier towards Disentis, but this is only a ripping over of the brimfulness of Italy on to the Swiss side. Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino
  • Hence Moses chose rather to drink a brimmer of these, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season. The Riches of Bunyan
  • The man pocketed the envelope, then briefly touched the brim of his hat as he stood.
  • Her voice was brimming over with joyous laughter.
  • It's quite fiery stuff with pepper, spices and some tannic activity but best of all, it's over-brimming with summer fruit flavours.
  • Her face showed little emotion as the dark flicker of shadows created by the brim of her hat shaded her eyes.
  • It consisted of a piece of cloth that was sewn to a finely embroidered, brimless hat.
  • Lying in clouds of scent in the sunken tub filled to the brim, that streak of equanimity she had asserted itself.
  • All the candles were snuffed out immediately and a strong smell of brimstone and myrrh filled the room.
  • Brimstone is a fully fire and forget system, requiring no further interaction from the launch platform nor a post launch target designator.
  • Laila put the hat on, angling the brim like I did.
  • Out in the hallway, May hovered, holding her tan leather gloves and new brimless hat at her waist. Pure Sin
  • The painting portrays a beautiful lady , gentle and demure, brimming with joy and confidence in life.
  • She peered out at the world from beneath a yellow straw hat - a "boater," with circular crown and flat brim - wore a green wool muffler looped around her neck, and was lost in the immensity of Khristo's sheepskin jacket while he made do with a heavy sweater. NPR Topics: News
  • Her hat was an amazing affair with feathers and a huge brim.
  • Infectious set brims with the trio's near-psychic sense of mutual attunement. Times, Sunday Times
  • In ceremony, he appears as an old man with a cane, wearing a broad-brimmed straw hat, and is typically smoking a pipe and sprinkling water on others. The Bushman Way of Tracking God
  • The Millennium Stadium on match days is absolutely brimming with redundant miners, with coal dust in their hair and their pick-axes left at the turnstiles.
  • The said Cassekey also set up his abode in their tent; kept all his tribe away from the woman and child and aged man; kindled fires; caused, as a delicate attention, the only hog remaining on the wreck to be killed and brought to them for a midnight meal; and, in short, comported himself so hospitably, and with such kindly consideration toward the broad-brimmed Quaker, that we are inclined to account him the better-bred fellow of the two, in spite of his scant costume of horse-tail and belt of straw. Stories of Childhood
  • For the record, I was raised in a Christian home and both of my parents were ordained hellfire and brimstone ministers.
  • She was brimful of energy and enthusiasm.
  • He was no stranger to hardship brim of his hat. Times, Sunday Times
  • The session four years ago alienated many moderate voters with its fire-and-brimstone rhetoric that included attacks on gays and feminists.
  • The flat top keeps the height down and the wide brim balances sporty shoulders. Times, Sunday Times
  • The brim of his hat shaded his eyes, but I knew that they were looking at me.
  • My hard breathing was the only noise I could hear and when I looked up, my eyes brimming with frightened unshed tears, he was gone.
  • I wore a brimless baseball cap underneath.
  • That disc brims with behind-the-scenes explanations and endearing insights into the mind of the director.
  • A sinner so signally lov'd, -- and hearing my Mother, her eyes brimming with tears and her alabastrine fingers tightly locked together, murmur in unconscious repetition: Father and Son: a study of two temperaments
  • My digital satellite recorder is filled to the brim with all the new TV shows that fall into the category. MIND MELD: Science Fiction as a 'Geek' Genre
  • Dressed in black, with a broad-brimmed white beaver hat, craped in consequence of the recent death of his wife, he bowed with composed ease and a somewhat military grace to the multitude. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • He didn't intend to be brimful of conversation; let her make the running. A WORM OF DOUBT
  • It left me feeling full of food and brimming with energy. The Sun
  • Midway through his piece, Hoyt concedes the Times erred when it reported that O'Keefe entered the ACORN offices dressed as a pimp "in the outlandish costume -- fur coat, goggle-like sunglasses, walking stick and broad-brimmed hat ... Peter Dreier: Why ACORN Fell: The Times , Lies, and Videotape
  • With tears brimming, I stop filming and rub the backs of my knuckles across my eyes.
  • In old photos of my homeland in Bohemia I see our shepherd, with his broad-brimmed hat and his loden coat, leaning against a tree, knitting a woolen sock.
  • Brimming with this new dash of energy, Darteil just needed one more psychological push.
  • The luminary was a golden-haired, beaming, mild-eyed, God-like creature, gazing down in the vigour and intentness of youth upon an earth that was brimming with interest for him. Tess of the d'Urbervilles
  • He in particular is singled out in the painting by his broad brimmed hat, distinctive garb, and masterful gesture.
  • The shy emerald mantles the valleys and fledges the heights; the pussy-willows tremble by lake and stream; the wild crocus brims the hollows with a haze of violet; trailing his last ragged pennants of snow on the hills, winter makes his sullen retreat. The Trail of '98 A Northland Romance
  • I came of age in a period when our country brimmed with hope and generosity. The Good Fight
  • As she walked down the aisle her heart brimmed over with love and adoration for Charles.
  • In any World Cup, any stadium that is anything less than full to the brim is a bit sacrilegious to viewers like me who would give a pinkie to be there. Ahmed Rehab: What the Vuvuzela Is Up With the Jabulani? Why World Cup 2010 Sucks So Far
  • I measured the hat, went out and got ribbon and silver trim, came home and figured out that the silver trim was just not powerful enough to overcome the gold trim, took the gold trim off, found out that the danged gold trim had also been helping to keep the wire in the edge of the brim, resewed that with invisible thread, and now Kauri's Katharsis
  • I called for small-beer, the master tipped the wink, and the servant brought me a brimmer of October. The Ontario Readers: The High School Reader, 1886
  • I was brimming, no, overflowing with good feelings.
  • Around midday, immaculately groomed horses appear, ridden by Antonio Banderas lookalikes wearing broad-brimmed hats and expressions of unassailable superiority.
  • Greg opened one trunk, and found it packed to the brim with books.
  • With its clear glass walls the main reading room resembles a fish tank, brimming with lazy activity as readers come and go.
  • It was some kind of scrapbook, stuffed to the brim with photos, letters, and newspaper clippings.
  • And brim up, I prithee, a cup for me, For this is the water of life, perdie! The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume I
  • Great bushy burnsides furzed out to his jawbone, and he peered from under the brim's shadow with dark eyes, the lids swollen and hooded as a raptor's. Cold Mountain
  • The world is hungry for Scotland's contemporary art and our artists and institutions are brimming with confidence.
  • But for all that Electric Moon is brimful of charm and many small gems of enlightenment.
  • The session four years ago alienated many moderate voters with its fire-and-brimstone rhetoric that included attacks on gays and feminists.
  • Tables vanish under bowls brimming with linguine vongole, lasagne and antipasti. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everybody at the club was breathless with excitement and brimming with optimism when we took to the field at Old Trafford on the opening day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Toon are on fire and are brimming over with confidence. The Sun
  • The fez, the red cap worn by many Turks, conveyed social standing and, because it lacked a brim, made it possible for its wearer to touch the ground with his forehead when saying prayers.
  • Small glass mugs of steaming hot, sugarless coffee with a strong and pleasant aroma, turned out to be just as popular among the golfers, as the tall glasses brimming over with frothy ice cold, sweetened coffee.
  • His eyes brimmed with tears
  • A wrench beside his face pertly pushed up the brim of his orange baseball cap.
  • Shaded by two Mediterranean oaks, it is bordered along its edge by a brimming blue-glazed swimming pool that shoots off into the garden.
  • As a result, the Book of Exodus is brimming with theophanies, legal formulas, songs, and poems.
  • The stocky, pot-bellied man who wears a wide-brimmed hat made of palm leaves, admits cockfighting is brutal but says the roosters are born to fight.
  • I egged her on, and we got her into the long coat, and adjusted the broad-brimmed bonnet and veil, and I jammed the shoes on her feet, and gloved her, and stuck the gamp in her hand -- and when she managed to stand, leaning against the table, she looked as much like the outward picture of a lady as made no odds. Flash For Freedom
  • The work is an icy bluish gray, brimming over with a quiet urgency and haunting luminosity.
  • Aware that some athletes might want to cash in even before the cereal-endorsement folks showed up, USOC handlers pleaded with the American athletes not to sell or trade their official uniforms (comprising nearly 50 articles of clothing, from broadbrim felt hats to leather flight jackets) - at least until after the closing ceremonies. New Age Games
  • Greenhouse shelves are brimming, but make room for cucurbit starts (squash, melons and gourds).
  • “Drink hael, Holy Clerk of Copmanhurst!” answered the warrior, and did his host reason in a similar brimmer. Ivanhoe
  • Better spare at brim than at bottom. 
  • The huge moons brims, begins to soften round its edges.
  • An abiding memory of Andalucia is of bright potted geraniums brimming over dazzling white walls under a deep blue sky.
  • a brimless hat
  • You go home, brimming with new political vigour. Times, Sunday Times
  • I hiked into palm washes and up unmarked trails, always water, carrying water everywhere, always a hat, wearing a broadbrimmed hat and a neckerchief, and I stood on promontories in punishing sun, stood and looked. Excerpt: Point Omega by Don DeLillo
  • It's dark, at times brooding, but brimming full of energy and orchestration.
  • It is a scene too brimming with filial trust and desire to be dismissed as cliché, which is why it is played out in myriad households around the world. G. Roger Denson: Women's Art of Renewal: Carrie Mae Weems, Vanessa Beecroft, Sharon Lockhart, Catherine Opie and Lisa Yuskavage
  • Coming from the port on the right, at the foot of what remains of Faraglione Piccolo, is the great pool, a reservoir brimming with water and sulphureous muds.
  • I bite my lip, aware of the hope brimming inside me.
  • He seeks, as I understand him, to prove a logical path between the heinous bestiality of the crimes of the woman and her eternal incarceration in the regions of brimstone and fire.
  • An elderly man in a shabby black overcoat and wide-brimmed beaver hat was standing in front of the magistrate's desk, clutching a newspaper in one hand and dabbing his eyes with a none too clean handkerchief.
  • Em's eyes brimmed with tears and she stormed out of the room.
  • IT'S weird, wacky and downright nasty, brimming with bile and anger. The Sun
  • Or is it a hat for personal use, in which case they might want a baseball cap with an extra big brim for coming off the plane. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is brimming with unused love, a passion for justice, a need to repent that surpasses what the law ordained.
  • He is brimming with charm, it is just charm in the shape of a breeze block. The Sun
  • The sentiment of travelling is always conveyed in the ancient bas-reliefs and vase paintings by certain conventional signs or accessories bestowed upon the figure represented, viz., a broad-brimmed and low-crowned hat ([Greek: petasos], Lat. Notes and Queries, Number 69, February 22, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • England and elsewhere is a burgonet skull-cap with a straight brim, neck-guard and often, in addition, a fixed vizor of three thin iron bars which are screwed into, and hang down from, the brim in front of the eyes. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • Some shall rise to the everlasting burnings of God; for God dwells in everlasting burnings and some shall rise to the damnation of their own filthiness, which is as exquisite a torment as the lake of fire and brimstone. Latest Articles
  • That said, this week's brimming with sparkling repartee and buzzing with bright ideas - so cruise and schmooze to your heart's content.
  • Now beside the runlets on the hills the pipkins of the mimulus, which have stood half full of shadow all day, brim over. The Spring of Joy: A Little Book of Healing
  • She passed him the mug, filled/full to the brim with hot black coffee.
  • Waterford, on the other hand, is filled to the brim with overalls-wearing, Farmer's Almanac-wisdom-spouting oldsters and women who wear plaid flannel shirts with patches on the elbows.
  • JR first heard of the existence of the TED prize two weeks ago, and initially was wary in communicating with prize officials through Skype, disguising himself in dark glasses and a low-brimmed hat, according to the Times. ARTINFO: Mysterious Globetrotting Street Artist JR Wins $100,000 TED Prize
  • Jem flipped his cap back on top of his head, the brim newly horseshoed. The Town
  • ‘The Divine Comedy’ is an epic poem brimming with information and eloquent literary devices.
  • Heit extracted a large, soft - brimmed straw hat.
  • That's why I say to you, be careful what you wish for, about me calling hellfire and brimstone down on a church for what you claim is its hypocrisy, since in my theology, you would fall first there. Abortion News and Information
  • The whole bottom section was brimming with bright green crunchy cucumber. Times, Sunday Times
  • And because of this, her world brimmed with mystery. Amaryllis in Blueberry
  • Another tip is to sew or heat press your company information, including address and phone number, inside the brim.
  • The walls were lined with book cases, which were full to the brim, and overflowing onto the floor.
  • The water was then carefully poured into the jar, until it was brim-full.
  • A burgonet is an open-type helmet generally found with ear flaps, a brim, a comb or a peaked finial, and sometimes a faceguard.
  • “Here is to thee, with all my heart, son Harry,” said the old man, filling a brimmer to his companion and another to himself; The Fair Maid of Perth
  • A fog covered her vision, a dark fog that smelt of burning brimstone.
  • Rob was just brimming with enthusiasm.
  • Clubs and strip joints were open for business, and dark pubs were filled to the brim with chilled customers.
  • Priginally, a taj is brimless hat worn by men and women in Muslim countries. Archive 2009-09-01
  • September 19, 2009 at 8:34 am ai neber see a pyrayt hat wif a long sord – duz it lye along teh brim liek a fevver, or duz it stik up inna air frum teh tawp? U cans maek teh bed later. I’z nawt - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • His victories are depicted in iron crosses notched inside the brim of the hat. Smithsonian Mag
  • The only explanation was that its tank was already brimful of water. BEAUTIFUL DREAMER
  • A wide-brimmed hat shadowed her face.
  • Taking up a little tumbler, in shape like those from which French postilions used to drink la goutte, he inspected it narrowly, wiped out the interior with his forefinger, filled it to the brim, and offered it to his guest28 with a bow. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah
  • Note how Indy's has a wider brim, unlike the one on the left The one on the left is more like a trilby, which is essentially a fedora with a narrower brim. Original Signal - Transmitting Digg
  • Bloodstained snow, heavy cloaks, blackened eyes, Indian rites, puritanical fire and brimstone and the ominous howl of vicious wolf beasts.
  • But on his rapid way he had found time to fling his hazel stick into a corner, his rough broadbrim upon the table, and these few emphatic words at his nephew: Journey to the Interior of the Earth
  • But I would have thought Cambridge would be brimful of classics about itself, so this is all very intriguing. Cambridge Reads « Tales from the Reading Room
  • Several pews ahead was the Lady in a grey pelisse and plain grey wide-brim hat.
  • She snickered, and I could imagine her shaking her head if she was watching my face brimming with laughter at the joke I had played on her.
  • On journeys women wore a light broad-brimmed petasos as a protection from the sun. Museum of Antiquity A Description of Ancient Life
  • his sermons were full of fire and brimstone
  • At the wood-pile on the shore you may generally see one of the people called "Pikes," whom you will recognize by a very broad-brimmed hat, a frequent squirting of tobacco-juice, and the possession of two or three hounds, whom they call hereabouts "hound-dogs," as we say "bull-dog. Northern California, Oregon, and the Sandwich Islands
  • If you go out, wear sunglasses and a hat with a brim to help to keep pollen from your eyes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everyone who works production at the plant wears white coveralls and a brimless white cap.
  • Then, fill up that salad or soup bowl to the brim!
  • This "frier," whose shanty leaned against a tumble-down house, and was propped up by heavy joists, green with moss, made a display of boiled mussels lying in large earthenware bowls filled to the brim with clear water; of dishes of little yellow dabs stiffened by too thick a coating of paste; of squares of tripe simmering in a pan; and of grilled herrings, black and charred, and so hard that if you tapped them they sounded like wood. The Fat and the Thin
  • The letterbox was brimming o'er when we arrived home this eve.
  • Also, the flat brim cap-wearing world was recently shaken to its colorway-coordinated core when a Baltimore fixed-gear freestyler was cited for "fancy riding. BSNYC Friday Fun Quiz!
  • Burlap bags brimmed with fragrant leaves and chips of various woods.
  • Rain dripped from the brim of his baseball cap.
  • Her eyes were brimming with unshed tears threatening to fall down her pale and fragile face.
  • Ryan, a keen Manchester City fan, was buried in a team strip sent to his Holborn Street, Brimrod, home by the Premier League club.
  • IT'S weird, wacky and downright nasty, brimming with bile and anger. The Sun
  • Give me a highwayman and I was full to the brim; a Jacobite would do, but the highwayman was my favourite dish. Memories and Portraits
  • It is brimming with the delicious horror of excited gossipry. Contemporary American Composers Being a Study of the Music of This Country, Its Present Conditions and Its Future, with Critical Estimates and Biographies of the Principal Living Composers; and an Abundance of Portraits, Fac-simile Musical Autographs, and
  • Water heated by the stove has overbrimmed the kettle.
  • He turned the key in the familiar lock, brimming with excitement and hope. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘Faith, Broadbrim, I believe thou art right, and the old gentleman in the flaxen jazy shall have no more of the comforter. Redgauntlet
  • Ultimately, the prosecution's case came down to a short conversation between Wilhelm and Brimble seven years ago, overheard by cabinmate Ryan Kuchel, who had said he had been woken when Brimble and Wilhelm came to his cabin. The Sydney Morning Herald News Headlines
  • Both wore black hats with short crowns and wide brims.
  • This is good, because if CMS wasn't filled to the brim with insufferableness then we wouldn't get any kind of satisfaction from beating them. Front Page, The Student Life (RSS)
  • Teddy stood on the tarmac, balancing on his cane, the rain dripping from the broad flat brim of his hat. THE SERPENT'S MARK
  • And the laver was a hand breadth thick: and the brim thereof was like the brim of a cup, or the leaf of a crisped lily: it contained two thousand bates. The Bible, Douay-Rheims, Complete The Challoner Revision
  • A wide-brimmed hat was pulled down low over his eyes, but Alanis could still see them, surprisingly watchful and aware, glittering at her, like two black beetles in a weather-beaten face.
  • The place is, as SARK says, the most brimstony on the same level. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, October 17, 1891
  • There was always a red plastic bucket brimming with peas like precious emerald marbles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The best cattle were killed and the meat salted and sun-dried; and abundance of red peppers and sweet potatoes were gathered; and the tall pinang-trees were climbed for the spicy betel nut, the sirih-leaf was tied up in bundles, and every man filled his tobacco pouch and lime box to the brim, so that he might not want any of the materials for chewing the refreshing betel during the journey. The Malay Archipelago
  • Brimmer promises the Obama Administration will be an active and constructive participant in Council deliberations.
  • Elizabeth quietly sipped her tea and was glad she wore her wide brimmed hat instead of her cloche hat today.
  • Gabe promptly filled Ethan's bowl to the brim with the contents of that pot, which turned out to be a mash of vegetables.
  • I was meditating," said Mr. Brimberly, busied with the bottles and glasses, "I was cogitating calling hup Mr. Jenkins, the Stanways 'butler across the way. The Definite Object A Romance of New York
  • Then protect yourself with wrap-around sunnies and a wide-brimmed hat. The Sun
  • Here and there swaggered a strapping riverman, his small felt hat cocked aggressively over one eye, its brim curled up behind; a cigar stump protruding at an angle from beneath his sweeping moustache; his hands thrust into the pockets of his trousers, "stagged" off at the knee; the spikes of his river boots cutting little triangular pieces from the wooden sidewalk. The Blazed Trail
  • George T. Brimmer - duracrete boots, skydropped over Naboo Does It Hurt When I Go Like This?
  • Meronyms - words that name a part of what your keyword or keyphrases signify (e.g. ‘brim’ and ‘crown’ are meronyms of ‘hat’)
  • Both large containers were filled to the brim with a red thick goo.
  • Expression brimming with hostility, she turned from him. Dreams of a Dark Warrior

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