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
that's brilliant!!!
smart, and ingenious.
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.
No, "The brilliant sunset over the desert" is a sentence fragment because it lacks a subject and a verb. A complete sentence needs both a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is happening).
Do either of these phrases contain a noun AND a verb? You must have both to have a proper sentence. "The beginning of a new era of literature in the United States" ... did what? There is no verb so this is a fragment. The thought has not been completed so it makes no sense. "The brilliant sunset over the desert" ... again, does what? Another fragment that makes no sense.
The diamond is brilliant. (shiny) The idea was brilliant. (good)She was a brilliant person. (smart)The speaker had brilliant sound quality. (clear)
The address of the Brilliant Branch is: 103 Steuben St., Brilliant, 43913 1137
more brilliant, most brilliant
more brilliant, most brilliant
Brilliant
Brilliant.
just brilliant minds.