1 the top part of a hill or the edge of something high such as a cliff or rock:
the brow of the hill
They were unwilling to accept categories of differentiation not based on the sweat of their brows and the common migrant experience.
The parents smile kindly before wiping their sweaty brows.
By the sweat of his aging brow he had earned the domestic closure frustrated by the sudden death of a daughter.
A stoical metronome, she moves only to brush a hand across her brow from time to time.
At the brow of the hill the wall is single storey, allowing a modest entrance to the gallery.
When all was said and done, jazz retained its low-brow status within the cultural hierarchy, despite its liaison with the avant-garde.
Did it mean teaching him or her higher level reading and literacy skills to be able to approach high-brow literature?
Although compliments such as these can arouse suspicion among high-brow readers, they are not meant as blurbs for the back cover.