Advertisement
Advertisement
brink
[ bringk ]
noun
- the edge or margin of a steep place or of land bordering water.
- any extreme edge; verge.
- a crucial or critical point, especially of a situation or state beyond which success or catastrophe occurs:
We were on the brink of war.
brink
/ brɪŋk /
noun
- the edge, border, or verge of a steep place
the brink of the precipice
- the highest point; top
the sun fell below the brink of the hill
- the land at the edge of a body of water
- the verge of an event or state
the brink of disaster
Discover More
Other Words From
- brinkless adjective
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of brink1
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of brink1
Discover More
Example Sentences
She was sexually and verbally abused, leading her to the brink of suicide.
Emergent procedures provide their benefit right away and have the awesome potential to rescue a patient from the brink of death.
It is conceivable, if highly unlikely, that most Palestinians will try to pull back from the brink.
Meanwhile, their Missouri hometown appears to be on the brink of chaos.
But things were once a lot closer to the brink than most people knew.
I swung down from my horse on the brink of the creek, cinched the saddle afresh, and rolled a cigarette.
It was a hippopotamus which had been standing on the river-brink within six yards of the muzzle of his gun.
He sees no longer the brink of the abyss beside which the path of progress picks its painful way.
And presently we galloped across a mile or two of level grassland and pulled up on the very brink of Sage Creek canyon.
On the opposite side of the stream, set back about thirty paces from the brink, stood a granite boulder.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse