Dictionary
Bright
adjective
Visually dazzling; luminous, lucent, clear, radiant; not dark.
Exact(8)
Yellen's studied, academic, consensus-friendly approach is also another plus in her favor – particularly in comparison to Larry Summers, her bright but brash rival for the job.
They hitched rides on the back of motorbikes that brought them towards the bright lights of one of the few clubs still open in Gueckedou.
One even might go as far as saying the future is bright.
Glasby believes too little is being done to turn commissioning into a career of choice for future public service leaders: "If you are a young, bright, aspirational 18-year-old, what is there out there to make commissioning attractive?" This article is published by Guardian Professional.
Mac cosmetics this year launched a range of Iris Apfel colours, including Pink Pigeon and Scarlet Ibis, referencing the name of the Met show – Rare Bird – and Apfel's penchant for bright colours.
She insists she feels broadly hopeful about the role of her five parishes, but optimism in this context calls for a determination to look on the bright side.
If you think of us as a comet, we've got the bright, shiny head, but we're not dragging along a giant tail," he says.
18 min: "Come now Jacob, maybe the Countdown started because some UEFA bright spark suggested using Europe's "The Final Countdown" before games, but things got lost in translation?
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