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"brilliant of" is not a correct or usable phrase in written English.
It would not make sense in a sentence.
Exact(57)
"He's brilliant, of course.
Brilliant of mind.
NEIL Well it's brilliant, of course.
As brilliant, of course, but more popularly accessible.
Robert Koren has been coruscatingly brilliant of late.
I believe Kennedy was the most brilliant of all.
Zweig's writing is some of the most brilliant of the 20th century.
His court style may have been the most brilliant of all the Mughal painters.
He's a dreamer, and he thinks he's the most brilliant of all the chiefs of state".
How brilliant of Limón to have imposed these formalities on Shakespeare's almost unbearable story.
Bruce is chatting to Claudia, who thinks everyone was brilliant, of course.
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