bright implies emitting or reflecting a high degree of light.
brilliant implies intense often sparkling brightness.
radiant stresses the emission or seeming emission of rays of light.
luminous implies emission of steady, suffused, glowing light by reflection or in surrounding darkness.
lustrous stresses an even, rich light from a surface that reflects brightly without glittering.
Examples of brilliant in a Sentence
Adjective
a brilliant star in the sky
a store decorated in brilliant colors
He pitched a brilliant game.
She gave a brilliant performance.
She has a brilliant mind. Noun
the diamond cutter set out an array of brilliants to show the various ways the diamond could be cut
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Adjective
The album is full of strange, brilliant contradictions; Oklou slides masterfully between fun and eccentricity, pump and pathos.—Sheldon Pearce, New Yorker, 24 Apr. 2026 Makar put Colorado ahead in the second, dangling just inside the blue line and firing a brilliant wrist shot through traffic.—ABC News, 24 Apr. 2026 Cam Schlittler, the former Walpole High and Northeastern University standout who ended the Red Sox’s season with his Game 3 gem in the American League Wild Card Series last fall, was brilliant in his first professional start at Fenway Park.—Mac Cerullo, Boston Herald, 24 Apr. 2026 Marigolds also give off an odor that repels garden pests while attracting pollinators with their warm, brilliant colors.—Heather Bien, The Spruce, 24 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for brilliant
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
French brillant, present participle of briller to shine, from Italian brillare
Noun
borrowed from French brillant, noun derivative of brillantbrilliant entry 1