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margin (n.)

mid-14c., "edge of a sea or lake;" late 14c., of a written or printed paper, "space between a block of text and the edge of a leaf or sheet;" from Old French margin and directly from Latin marginem (nominative margo) "edge, brink, border, margin," from PIE root *merg- "boundary, border."

The general sense of "bordering space, boundary space, rim or edge" is from late 14c. Meaning "comfort allowance, cushion, scope, range, provision for enlarged or extended action" is by 1851; margin of error is attested by 1889. Stock market sense of "sum deposited with a broker to cover risk of loss" is from 1848. Related: Margins.

margin (v.)

c. 1600, "to furnish with marginal notes," from margin (n.). From 1715 as "to furnish with a margin." Related: Margined.

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Definitions of margin from WordNet

margin (n.)
the boundary line or the area immediately inside the boundary;
Synonyms: border / perimeter
margin (n.)
an amount beyond the minimum necessary;
the margin of victory
margin (n.)
the amount of collateral a customer deposits with a broker when borrowing from the broker to buy securities;
Synonyms: security deposit
margin (n.)
(finance) the net sales minus the cost of goods and services sold;
Synonyms: gross profit / gross profit margin
margin (n.)
the blank space that surrounds the text on a page;
he jotted a note in the margin
margin (n.)
a permissible difference; allowing some freedom to move within limits;
Synonyms: allowance / leeway / tolerance
From wordnet.princeton.edu