The sun shone so bright people got burned.
The light shone brightly in the darkness.
The light shone through the crack in the wall.
glowed burned
shone
shine - shone - shone. (shone is pronounced shon)."Shone" can be regarded as all-purpose.However "shined" is transitive - it needs an object - so shoes or a table can be shined, but it would not be appropriate to use "shined" as a description of someone's ability.
the sun shone brightly
The light shone brightly in the darkness.
The light shone through the crack in the wall.
The sun shone this morning.
Her intellect shone through the cloud of ignorance like a flash of lightning.
Her eyes shone with an irrepresable twinkle of admiration.
The lights shone eerily on the wall as she walked into the room.
The light shone with absolute brilliance.He grinned at the brilliance of his plan.
The unicorn frolicked in the meadow, while the sun shone brightly!
The cat's luminous green eyes shone in the dark night.
Her beautiful ebony necklace shone against her pale white skinin the moonlight.Not the best sentence in the world but I did answer your question!
The word brightly is already an adverb.An example sentence with this word is: "the moon shone brightly that night".