brilliant
brilliant — adjective
1. so good that it strongly impresses or pleases people.
so good that it strongly impresses or pleases people.
The goalkeeper made a brilliant save in the final minute.
brilliant + sporting action
We had a brilliant holiday near the sea last August.
brilliant + experience
Noa did a brilliant job decorating the hall for Parents' Day.
The street band gave a brilliant show despite the cold rain.
- excellent
slightly more formal and common in evaluations
- great
broader and more casual
- outstanding
suggests being better than others in the group
- superb
strong praise, often with a polished tone
- terrible
very bad in quality
- disappointing
not as good as hoped
- ordinary
good enough, but not impressive
用法筆記
Common with performances, experiences, ideas, and results. Distinguish from sense 2 (INTELLIGENT): this sense gives broad praise, even when no clever thinking is involved.
常見錯誤
2. showing an unusually high level of intelligence or skill.
showing an unusually high level of intelligence or skill.
Aiko solved the last maths problem with a brilliant shortcut.
brilliant + clever solution
The whole class copied Bao's brilliant answer on the science quiz.
brilliant + answer
Ines became a brilliant engineer after years of careful practice.
One brilliant move gave Zane the chess trophy before lunch.
- dim
informal word for not quick in understanding
- incompetent
used when the problem is lack of skill rather than lack of intelligence
文法句型
brilliant at + subject/activity
用法筆記
Usually used when intelligence or skill is the reason for the praise. Distinguish from sense 1 (VERY GOOD), which can praise a show, trip, meal, or result without focusing on cleverness.
常見錯誤
3. sending out a lot of light, or showing a strong clear colour.
sending out a lot of light, or showing a strong clear colour.
The moon looked brilliant above the dark fishing boats.
brilliant + light source
Greta wore a brilliant orange coat on the grey winter street.
brilliant + vivid colour
The morning sun poured brilliant light through the kitchen window.
Fireworks opened in brilliant green and gold over the river.
- bright
the most general word for strong light
- dazzling
suggests light so strong that it is hard to look at
- vivid
used mainly for colours rather than light
- glittering
stresses many small points of reflected light
用法筆記
Most often used with nouns for light, colour, jewels, or the sky. Distinguish from sense 1 (VERY GOOD): here 'brilliant' describes what the eye sees, not how successful something is.
常見錯誤
brilliant — noun
1. a gemstone, most often a diamond, shaped in the brilliant style so it reflects l
a gemstone, most often a diamond, shaped in the brilliant style so it reflects light strongly.
The ring held a tiny brilliant between two dark blue stones.
jewellery context: brilliant in a ring
Under the shop lamp, the brilliant sent flashes across the glass.
light reflecting from a brilliant
The buyer asked whether the center brilliant was natural or lab-made.
Grandma kept the loose brilliant in a velvet box upstairs.
用法筆記
Mainly used in jewellery language, often for diamonds. Everyday speakers usually say 'diamond' or 'stone' unless the cut matters.