Deslumbrante in english
Dazzling
pronunciation: dæzəlɪŋ part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: dæzəlɪŋ part of speech: adjective
In gestures
deslumbrante1 = glittering ; blinding.
Example: The article 'The glittering prizes' likens book prizes to a contemporary form of patronage.Example: Between the blinding light of day and the dark of night, there is a strip of twilight on the globe where colorful details in the atmosphere can be seen.deslumbrante2 = dazzling ; bedazzling ; blazing ; arresting ; stunning ; scintillating.
Example: It was a grand day, one of those dazzling spectacular blue and gold days of early fall.Example: He is a skillful raconteur, his writing is wonderfully entertaining and his message is controversial, bedazzling, savvy, disquieting... yet optimistic.Example: Marie-Nicole Lemieux in the title role provides a blazing star performance.Example: It is when speakers have no feeling for pause that their speech seems to burble on without any arresting quality; the club bore is a burbler: he has not learnt the eloquence of silence.Example: The trends themselves are not hard to anticipate, although the stunning pace of development is often not fully appreciated.Example: Few other watercolour artists, before or since, could produce such a scintillating piece of work with such economy as Edward Wesson.