Radiant is the correct spelling.
more radiant
Her blonde hair was radiant in the summer sun.A model needs to have a radiant smile in order to advertise toothpaste.A radiant heater gives off infrared radiation that heats up surrounding objects.
The abstract noun for the adjective radiant is radiance.The word radiant is also a concrete noun; a word for the point or object from which light or heat radiates; the point in space from which a meteor shower appears to emanate.
Radiant
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radieux r a d i e u x
radiant
radiant (adjective)קוֹרֵן (korén) = radiant, shining, irradiantזוֹהֵר (zohér) = radiant, lustrous, flaring, incandescentמַקרִין (makrín) = radiant, horned, cornuteזַהֲרוּרִי (zahrurí) = glowing, radiant, reddish
more radiant, most radiant
more radiant, most radiant
more radiant
Her radiant smile was enough to make him fall in love. This is an example sentence using radiant.
The radiant flux formula is given by the equation: radiant flux radiant energy / time. This formula is used to calculate the amount of radiant energy emitted or transmitted by a source by dividing the total radiant energy by the time over which it is emitted or transmitted.
The comparative form of "radiant" is "more radiant," and the superlative form is "most radiant." Since "radiant" is a multi-syllable adjective, it typically forms its comparisons using "more" and "most" rather than through suffixes. For example, you might say, "She is more radiant than her sister," and "She is the most radiant of all."
more radiant
Radiant, ravishing, respelendent...
The comparative form of "radiant" is "more radiant," and the superlative form is "most radiant." These forms are used to compare the intensity of radiance between two or more subjects. For example, you might say, "She is more radiant than her sister," or "She is the most radiant person at the event."