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Wiktionary
brimfull

a. (obsolete spelling of brimful English)

WordNet
brimfull

adj. filled to capacity; "a brimful cup"; "I am brimful of chowder"; "a child brimming over with curiosity"; "eyes brimming with tears" [syn: brimful, brimming]

Usage examples of "brimfull".

But Dulcie was brimfull of reverence, she was generous to the ends of her hair, she liked to feel her heart in her mouth with admiration.

The press box was still brimfull and, whilst a court order prevented those journalists present from naming Rose, nothing could stop them outlining the allegations against the defendants.

He is apt at illustration and application, and has a fine memory, stored brimfull of entertaining anecdotes, snatches of poetry, and those thousand nothings which tell for so much in society, and which it is so pleasant to find combined with much else that is valuable.

The tureen is almost brimfull of sudsy liquid, a sea sponge bobbing around in it like a peeled potato.

The result, last time, had been an epochal, roaring row, in which the former king had openly accused his youngest of cowardice and lack of manhood, after having sneakily filled him brimfull of Hatburna mead.

There were waggons parked in the square filled brimfull of naked women who hid their faces with their hair.