I would stick my mouth in the center of the glass and sip for about 15-20 seconds and then your glass won't be filled to the brim
Cohesion
capillarity
Cohesion
No, a glass filled to the brim with ice and water will not overflow once the ice starts to melt. The ice displaces some of the volume of the water, so there is enough space for the melted ice without overflowing.
Brim typically means the edge of something, and it will usually refer to a hat. Brim also is used as a verb, when something, such as a cup, is very full.
The cup was filled till the brim
It depends on how much ice was in the glass and how much water it created as it melted. If the ice displaces enough water to raise the water level near the brim, then it could overflow once the ice melts and adds more water.
The edge or rim of a container is called the brim. That is why you hear the phrase "filled to the brim."
It depends on: -The current temperature of the water. (If it was already cold, the water would probably decrease because both heat and cold causes water to increases) -The size of the glass. -How much the temperature decreases.
I filled the cup right up to the brim. The brim of the hat is curled nicely.
Amount of space available than an object can hold at maximum. For example, a glass of milk filled all the way to the brim. The milk is the volume.
About the only complaint that could be made is that it filled to the brim with tourists.