The term "brimming river" often refers to a river that is full to the point of overflowing, typically due to heavy rainfall or melting snow. It evokes imagery of a vibrant, flowing body of water that is abundant and teeming with life. In literature and poetry, it may symbolize abundance, fertility, or the passage of time. The phrase can also denote the emotional or spiritual overflow experienced by individuals, reflecting a state of heightened feeling or inspiration.
'Brimming water' is the state water is in when it is about to spill over the boundaries of a river, lake or dam. It is dangerous in this state because it is about to cause a flood onto dry land.
Raymond Frederick Brooke has written: 'The brimming river'
The phrase should be "brimming with energy". Something brimming is overflowing. So energy is overflowing or seems to be.
The brimming mugs of hot soup and spoons.
No, "brimming" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeias are words that imitate the sound they represent, like "buzz" or "meow." "Brimming" describes something that is filled to the point of overflowing.
a knike
The phrase "filled to the brim with sorrow" could be a suitable answer to describe something that is "brimming with sadness".
I filled the cup right up to the brim. The brim of the hat is curled nicely.
that's a sentence using brimming. look at my one that's almost the same that's use non violence in a sentence.
Full Abundant Plentiful Brimming
Brimming!skimming,trimming
brimful, brimming, bursting, chockablock