I think it's brillar.
It means to shine.
more brilliant, most brilliant
By faces, one must assume that you mean facets. The brilliant cut, according to Wikipedia: "The original round brilliant-cut was developed by Marcel Tolkowsky in 1919. The modern round brilliant consists of 58 facets..." You can read more, below.
excellent
smart, and ingenious.
that's brilliant!!!
This is a fragment of a sentence since it is missing a verb.
If you mean a regular sentence with a subject, verb, and otherwise than yes. The sun was shining off her golden hair making it have a glorious and brilliant glow. hows that?
The noun form for the verb to exploit is exploiter or exploitability. Another noun form is exploitation. However, the word 'exploit' is also a noun as well as a verb; an exploit is an act, a deed, in particular a brilliant or heroic deed.
more brilliant, most brilliant
Brilliant.
Brilliant
more brilliant, most brilliant
more brilliant, most brilliant
The address of the Brilliant Branch is: 103 Steuben St., Brilliant, 43913 1137
The diamond is brilliant. (shiny) The idea was brilliant. (good)She was a brilliant person. (smart)The speaker had brilliant sound quality. (clear)
just brilliant minds.
Brilliant