Yes, brilliant in Spanish can mean intelligent. It can also mean brilliant like the sun. In fact, "to shine" is brillar. Depends on whether you're hearing "brilliant" in Harry Potter movie, where it just has a general idea of "good".
Most adverbs in Spanish have that ending. It doesn't really mean anything except, I suppose, that the word is likely an adverb. I'm not aware of any other part of speech that ends in "-mente".
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I'm pretty sure it's the same as how we add "-y" to the ends of adjectives to form adverbs. In English, "simple" becomes "simply", and in Spanish, "simple" becomes "simplemente". I'm pretty sure it's the same as how we add "-y" to the ends of adjectives to form adverbs. In English, "simple" becomes "simply", and in Spanish, "simple" becomes "simplemente".
Likewise, "brillante" is Spanish for "brilliant", and "brillantemente" is Spanish for "brilliantly". Why is it simplemente brillante?
Shouldn't it be the other way around? Simplemente is modifying brilliante, right?
You are simply brilliant. Eres and el es often sound similar. In conversation use context. English Choose a language for shopping.
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