I'm trying to find information about the grammatical correctness of interchanging lighter and brighter in the sense of: I turned on the lamp and the room became lighter. I turned on the lamp...
In April of 1947, when the Commission began its work, that dim light at the end of the tunnel was so dim as to be no light at all. Russia, an Russia only, among the great nations of the earth, has been unwilling to take those steps which might make that dim light brighter.
4 I am writing a function which takes in components of a color (as red, green, blue component values) and makes the color brighter or darker based on the fraction that the developer provides. If the fraction is less than 0, it makes the color darker, if the fraction is greater than 0 it makes the color brighter.
Blonde is brighter than fair. It has the following - either, or both: lighter toned overall more yellow in it. It tends to look 'sunnier' and more dramatic, brighter than fair hair There's also a much whiter blonde - like an Icelandic or Nordic blonde - 'ice blonde' As seen in 'Legolas' the warrior elf in the movie 'The Lord Of The Rings' c. 2001.
More specifically, a caustic is where light is either reflected or refracted such that it is concentrated in an area that is brighter than the surroundings -- so it's the bright lines that are seen on the bottom of a swimming pool, but not the space between them (even though that space also is receiving reflected or refracted rays).