Of high or especially quick cognitive capacity.
Sinònims
Examples for "bright"
Examples for "bright"
1And he said the future of American business and markets is bright.
2They were all healthy young people, with bright minds and good values.
3In an instant you forget; the sky is bright; the blood pounds.
4However, beyond the bright lights of New York visibility was not good.
5At just 44 years of age, his future remained bright, they concluded.
1Consumers should balance security concerns with their need to use smart devices.
2It needed to be a good question: something smart, perceptive, and classy.
3They want a pollution economy - we want a smart green economy.
4She was obviously smart enough to understand the situation without being told.
5But the new thinking is what organisations need is really smart people.
1However the team found a clever way of working out the age.
2At first he thought simply of clever questions to ask the Sage.
3MagSafe is extremely clever as a concept and exceedingly fine in reality.
4The vibe knob is a clever solution to a thorny social problem.
5There's some really clever use of pixelation and freezing and different points.
1Technology offers great promise with 'intelligent borders'. Hunt was educated at Oxford.
2You'd think they'd develop an intelligent approach to land allocation and use.
3As a result, their insults are often witty, literary and highly intelligent.
4Between ten and twenty components come together to form an intelligent individual.
5You're here because you're both young, intelligent, active professionals with good prospects.
1As a result, their insults are often witty, literary and highly intelligent.
2She is all vanity: fancies herself beautiful; witty; in short, like you.
3In modern times Pitt was grave; Fox, Melbourne, and Canning were witty.
4I chuckled, convinced that I had just thought a particularly witty thought.
5Are you sure about that one!' But he's quite witty and bright.
1She was only sixteen, this sharp-witted little girl, and a beautiful blonde.
2In the course of her account, she emerges as sharp-witted if occasionally haughty.
3But she was sharp-witted, and made the most of the situation even so.
4He's sharp-witted, but is apparently interested only in direct, quantifiable objectives.
5In regard to other things he was sharp-witted above his fellows.
1He's self-deprecating and quick-witted enough to keep the action breezing right along.
2They have the reputation of being the most quick-witted of all Chinese.
3But the four police were oversure, and Yasmini too quick-witted for them.
4He jests with his grief, too, in quick-witted retort, as Hamlet jests:
5Despite his reputation for quietness, Seaman is quick-witted and bolshie with hecklers.
6The parson's wife was quick-witted, and she thought of the bead bag.
7I too squatted by Noma's head, and grew quick-witted in my fear.
8But awkward as he was, he was quick-witted and good at repartee.
9He was a quick-witted man, sociable and likeable, if not entirely cultured.
10Neither was Nick ready to speak first; he was a quick-witted negro.
11In his grey lounge suit he had the look of a quick-witted clerk.
12Fortunately, the prince was quick-witted enough to see the point of the joke.
13Athletic, quick and quick-witted as well as a good shot stopper.
14But the quick-witted Bartley took the alarm, and literally collared him.
15There was a change in the colonel's manner, which the quick-witted child heeded.
16But the savage woman is nothing if not quick-witted and politic.