The Spanish equivalent of the English sentence 'you are so brilliant' is the following: Usted es tan brillante, or Tu eres tan brillante. The Spanish pronunciation is the following: oo-STE eh stah bree-YAN-tay; and too EH-ray sta bree-YAN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'usted' means 'you'; 'es' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'; and 'tu' 'you'; 'eres' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'. Spanish speakers aren't required to use subject pronouns. For the verb ending tends to identify whether the subject is first [I], second [you] or third [he/she/it] person. So Usted and tu don't have to be included in the two sample sentences above.
Ella es inteligente.
It would depend on the context, but to use "smart" as an adjective you should say inteligente.
This may be bragging, but the translation is "Soy inteligente."(The other Spanish word for smart, elegante, means to look nice, to be elegant.)
No muy buena is the best way to say "not very good" in Spanish.
Say "Muy delicioso!" (Very dilicious.)
The word for street smart is: vivo(a).
Las muchachas indias (hindúes) son muy inteligentes.
el es inteligente
perro inteligente
Ella es inteligente.
It would depend on the context, but to use "smart" as an adjective you should say inteligente.
No es inteligente Inteligente no es
This may be bragging, but the translation is "Soy inteligente."(The other Spanish word for smart, elegante, means to look nice, to be elegant.)
tu hermano es inteligente
"Guau, no eres listo/inteligente"
mi primo es muy inteligente
tres chicas elegantes ('smart', meaning 'chic') Tres chicas inteligentes ('smart' meaning 'intelligent')