In this meaning, brilliant is not used with ‘very’. You say:
We had an absolutely brilliant time.
✗Don’t say: We had a very brilliant time.
4SUCCESSFULsuccessful 成功的 very successful 极为成功的,辉煌的
He had a long and brilliant career.
他的事业长久而辉煌。
The project was a brilliant success.
这个项目非常成功。
—brilliantlyadverbadv
The sun was shining brilliantly.
阳光灿烂。
The goalkeeper played brilliantly.
守门员表现非常出色。
Examples from the Corpus
brilliant• "How was your trip?" "Absolutely brilliant!"• Have you seen her dance? She's absolutely brilliant.• The new serieskicks off with brilliant action shots taken at SummerSlam, the record breaking Wembley event.• She's brilliant at handling difficult clients.• a brilliantbluesky• Richard Perle was a brilliant, broodingdefenseexpert with strongly neoconservativeleanings.• After a brilliantcareer at St Luke's Hospital she was given her own department.• a long and brilliant career• Best gross went to Eamon McCaul whose 74 was a brilliant effort in a difficult crosswind.• a brillianthistorian• Joanna came up with a brilliant idea for a new book.• a brilliant idea• All of a sudden the stage was flooded with brilliant light.• the brilliant lights of the stadium• Being their son must have meant living constantly in the shadow of two brilliantluminaries.• A brilliantmathematician and a natural-born bomb-maker.• Fans of the novel claim that its stomach-turning violence is a brilliantmetaphor for the 1980s culture of consumerism and self-gratification.• Call it foolhardy or brilliant or shocking or crazy.• Michael Horden gave a brilliantperformance as King Lear.• The brilliantphysicist Paul Dirac first put forward this theory back in 1990.• brilliant red and yellowflowers• a brilliantscientist• His true love, a brilliant student named Adrienne, died in her youth when she was struck by a car.• The decision to reorganize the company was a brilliantsuccess.• A shaft of brilliantsunlightshone through the dustyattic window.• Suddenly, I looked up and saw a point of light that was more brilliant than any star I had ever seen.• Paganini was a brilliantviolinist, famous for his technicalskill in both playing and composing music.
brilliant sunshine• Flanked by the two men, they walked down a widemarblestaircase, and out into the brilliant sunshine.• When I left the Trowbridge house, I stood still, blinking in the brilliant sunshine.• But money and the recession were forgotten as I skied in the brilliant sunshine of Obergurgl just a few days before Christmas.• The brilliant sunshine seemed to be mocking her.
brilliant idea• Last year, I had what in all duemodesty I shall call a brilliant idea.• Many experts, however, reckoned they had the germ of a brilliant idea.• Then Pat and George had a brilliant idea.• When I awoke, though, I had a brilliant idea.• Their keenintellects and powerfulpersonalities could spark off more than just brilliant ideas at times.• Nixon had some brilliant ideas, but he did not build the constituencynecessary to carry them out.• But interspersed with these brilliant ideas have come some terribleerrors.
absolutely brilliant• Admit it - as scams go, this one is absolutely brilliant.• I've just bought Moby's album, Play-it's absolutely brilliant.• The fashionparade was absolutely brilliant.• The Heguy cousins were absolutely brilliant, and both played a wonderful game, scoring most of the goals between them!• And-guess what-it sounds absolutely brilliant. $ band pieces are impressive enough.
brilliant success• He is in the winter of his years: august, sophisticated, clearly a brilliant success.• If the former, then the decision, after a nerve-testing time-lag, was a brilliant success.• Some are already in use, and have achievedbrilliant success.• Since then Milton Keynes has been called a brilliant success, and a place with no heart or soul.• The concerto was a brilliant success for Barber and Browning.
Originbrilliant
(1600-1700)French present participle of briller“to shine”, from Italianbrillare, probably from Latinberyllus; → BERYL