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brow

[brou]
–noun
1. Anatomy. the ridge over the eye.
2. the hair growing on that ridge; eyebrow.
3. the forehead: He wore his hat low over his brow.
4. a person's countenance or mien.
5. the edge of a steep place: She looked down over the brow of the hill.
6. gangplank.

Origin:
bef. 1000; ME browe, OE brū; akin to ON brūn, Skt bhrūs

gang⋅plank

[gang-plangk]
–noun
a flat plank or small, movable, bridgelike structure for use by persons boarding or leaving a ship at a pier.
Also called brow, gangway.


Origin:
1840–50, Americanism; gang 1 + plank
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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brow   (brou)   
n.  
    1. The superciliary ridge over the eyes.

    2. The eyebrow.

    3. The forehead.

  1. A facial expression; countenance: "Speak you this with a sad brow?" (Shakespeare).

  2. The projecting upper edge of a steep place: the brow of a hill.


[Middle English, from Old English brū; see bhrū- in Indo-European roots.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

brow 
words for "eyelid," "eyelash," and "eyebrow" changed about maddeningly in O.E. and M.E. (and in all the W.Gmc. languages). Linguists have untangled the knot into two strands: 1. O.E. bræw (Anglian *brew) "eyelid," from P.Gmc. *bræwi- "blinker, twinkler" (related to Goth. brahw "twinkle, blink," in phrase in brahwa augins "in the twinkling of an eye"); the sense must have shifted before the earliest recorded O.E. usage from "eyelash" to "eyelid." 2. O.E. bru "eyelash," from P.Gmc. *brus "eyebrow," from PIE base *bhrus (cf. Skt. bhrus "eyebrow," Gk. ophrys, O.C.S. bruvi, Lith. bruvis "brow," O.Ir. bru "edge"). The sense must have been transferred in O.E. at an early date from "eyebrow" to "eyelash." Lacking a distinctive word for it, the Anglo-Saxons called an eyebrow ofer-bru, and in early M.E. they were known as uvere breyhes or briges aboue þe eiges. By c.1200, everything had moved "up." Bru/brouw (from bræw) became "eyelid;" and brew/breow (from O.E. bru) became "eyebrow." It remained the word for "eyebrow" in Scot. and northern Eng., where it naturally evolved into colloquial bree. In southern Eng., however, M.E. bru/brouw took over the sense of "eyebrows," in the form brues, and yielded the usual modern form of the word. To make matters worse, if possible, some southern writers 15c.-17c. used bree for "eyelashes," in what OED calls "a curious reversion to what had been the original OE. sense of bru." By 1535, brow had been given an extended sense of "forehead," especially with ref. to movements and expressions that showed emotion or attitude. Browbeat "to bully" is first recorded 1581, originally "to bear down with stern or arrogant looks." When my son was learning to talk, he called them eyebrowns, but it has no connection to brown; the -n- in the O.N. (brun) and Ger. (braune) forms of the word are from a gen. pl. inflection.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: brow
Pronunciation: 'brau
Function: noun
1 : EYEBROW
2 : either of the lateral prominences of the forehead
3 : FOREHEAD
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Medical Dictionary

brow (brou)
n.

  1. The eyebrow.

  2. See forehead.

The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
Copyright © 1997. Published by Houghton Mifflin.
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