YES
Both "brightly-coloured" and "brightly coloured" are correct in British English, with the former being more typical. In American English, "brightly colored" without a hyphen is commonly used.
The noun phrase in the sentence "I brought a brightly coloured woven mat" is "a brightly coloured woven mat." This phrase includes the main noun "mat," along with its modifiers "brightly coloured" and "woven," which provide additional information about the mat.
A kaka is a brighlty coloured parrot.
chesse
a bird
Newts are brightly coloured because they eat multi-colored animals which amazingly makes them super-natural!!!!
Yes
i dont no
They are brightly coloured to defer predators and warn them of it's poison.
it is venus.
An oriole is a brightly coloured bird.
wrasse