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brim (n.)

"brink, edge, margin," c. 1200, brymme "edge (of the sea), bank (of a river)," of obscure origin, perhaps akin to Old Norse barmr "rim, brim," probably related to dialectal German bräme "margin, border, fringe," from PIE *bhrem- "point, spike, edge." Extended by 1520s to the upper or projecting edge of anything hollow (cups, basins, hats).

Old English (and northern Middle English) had brim "sea, surf, pool, spring, river, body of water," of uncertain origin but probably unrelated, perhaps from the Germanic stem *brem- "to roar, rage." "It became obs. in ME.; but was perhaps used by Spenser" [OED].

brim (v.)

"to fill to the brim," 1610s, from brim (n.). Intransitive sense ("be full to the brim") attested from 1818. To brim over "overflow" is from 1825. Related: Brimmed; brimming.

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Definitions of brim from WordNet
1
brim (v.)
be completely full;
His eyes brimmed with tears
brim (v.)
fill as much as possible;
brim a cup to good fellowship
2
brim (n.)
the top edge of a vessel or other container;
Synonyms: rim / lip
brim (n.)
a circular projection that sticks outward from the crown of a hat;
From wordnet.princeton.edu