Star - meaning and definition. What is Star
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What (who) is Star - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Star; STAR; The Star (movie); S.T.A.R.; Star symbol; The Star (disambiguation); STAR (disambiguation); The Star (film); Star (song); S.T.A.R. (disambiguation); Star (game); Star (symbol); Star (film); Star (album); The Star (short story); The Star (casino); Star (comics)

star         
  • ALMA]]. This is the first time that ALMA has observed the surface of a star and resulted in the highest-resolution image of Betelgeuse available.
  • The [[Crab Nebula]], remnants of a supernova that was first observed around 1050 AD
  •  location=Gdansk}}</ref>
  • Classification]])
  • Overview of consecutive fusion processes in massive stars
  • Onion-like layers at the core of a massive, evolved star just before core collapses
  • Infrared image from NASA's [[Spitzer Space Telescope]] showing hundreds of thousands of stars in the [[Milky Way]] galaxy
  • The asymmetrical appearance of [[Mira]], an oscillating variable star
  • The [[reflection nebula]] [[NGC 1999]] is brilliantly illuminated by [[V380 Orionis]]. The black patch of sky is a vast hole of empty space and not a [[dark nebula]] as previously thought.
  • This view of [[NGC 6397]] includes stars known as [[blue straggler]]s for their location on the [[Hertzsprung–Russell diagram]].
  •  s2cid=121701212
 }}</ref>
  • Artist's impression of the [[Sirius]] system, a [[white dwarf]] star in orbit around an [[A-type main-sequence star]]
  • A cross-section of the [[Sun]]
  • Some of the well-known stars with their apparent colors and relative sizes
ASTRONOMICAL OBJECT CONSISTING OF A LUMINOUS SPHEROID OF PLASMA HELD TOGETHER BY ITS OWN GRAVITY
Stars; Stellum; Massive star; Stellar radius; Intermediate star; Intermediate mass star; Star fission; Stellar diameter; Intermediate mass stars; Star (astronomy); Intermediate-mass star
(stars, starring, starred)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
A star is a large ball of burning gas in space. Stars appear to us as small points of light in the sky on clear nights.
The night was dark, the stars hidden behind cloud.
N-COUNT
2.
You can refer to a shape or an object as a star when it has four, five, or more points sticking out of it in a regular pattern.
Children at school receive coloured stars for work well done.
N-COUNT
3.
You can say how many stars something such as a hotel or restaurant has as a way of talking about its quality, which is often indicated by a number of star-shaped symbols. The more stars something has, the better it is.
...five star hotels.
N-COUNT
4.
Famous actors, musicians, and sports players are often referred to as stars.
...Gemma, 41, star of the TV series Pennies From Heaven...
By now Murphy is Hollywood's top male comedy star...
Not all football stars are ill-behaved louts.
N-COUNT: oft supp N
5.
If an actor or actress stars in a play or film, he or she has one of the most important parts in it.
The previous year Adolphson had starred in a play in which Ingrid had been an extra...
VERB: V in n
6.
If a play or film stars a famous actor or actress, he or she has one of the most important parts in it.
...a Hollywood film, The Secret of Santa Vittoria, directed by Stanley Kramer and starring Anthony Quinn.
VERB: V n
7.
Predictions about people's lives which are based on astrology and appear regularly in a newspaper or magazine are sometimes referred to as the stars.
There was nothing in my stars to say I'd have travel problems!
= horoscope
N-PLURAL
star         
  • ALMA]]. This is the first time that ALMA has observed the surface of a star and resulted in the highest-resolution image of Betelgeuse available.
  • The [[Crab Nebula]], remnants of a supernova that was first observed around 1050 AD
  •  location=Gdansk}}</ref>
  • Classification]])
  • Overview of consecutive fusion processes in massive stars
  • Onion-like layers at the core of a massive, evolved star just before core collapses
  • Infrared image from NASA's [[Spitzer Space Telescope]] showing hundreds of thousands of stars in the [[Milky Way]] galaxy
  • The asymmetrical appearance of [[Mira]], an oscillating variable star
  • The [[reflection nebula]] [[NGC 1999]] is brilliantly illuminated by [[V380 Orionis]]. The black patch of sky is a vast hole of empty space and not a [[dark nebula]] as previously thought.
  • This view of [[NGC 6397]] includes stars known as [[blue straggler]]s for their location on the [[Hertzsprung–Russell diagram]].
  •  s2cid=121701212
 }}</ref>
  • Artist's impression of the [[Sirius]] system, a [[white dwarf]] star in orbit around an [[A-type main-sequence star]]
  • A cross-section of the [[Sun]]
  • Some of the well-known stars with their apparent colors and relative sizes
ASTRONOMICAL OBJECT CONSISTING OF A LUMINOUS SPHEROID OF PLASMA HELD TOGETHER BY ITS OWN GRAVITY
Stars; Stellum; Massive star; Stellar radius; Intermediate star; Intermediate mass star; Star fission; Stellar diameter; Intermediate mass stars; Star (astronomy); Intermediate-mass star
I
n.
heavenly body
1) a bright star
2) a falling, shooting star
3) the evening; morning; north star
4) a distant star
5) stars shine, twinkle
prominent performer
6) a baseball; basketball; box-office; film, movie (AE); football; guest; rugby; soccer; track star
fortune
7) a star rises; sets, wanes (her star was rising)
8) under a star (she was born under a lucky star)
medal
9) a battle star
II
v.
1) (D; intr.) to star as (in his last film he starred as a cowboy)
2) (D; intr.) to star in (to star in a new play)
star         
  • ALMA]]. This is the first time that ALMA has observed the surface of a star and resulted in the highest-resolution image of Betelgeuse available.
  • The [[Crab Nebula]], remnants of a supernova that was first observed around 1050 AD
  •  location=Gdansk}}</ref>
  • Classification]])
  • Overview of consecutive fusion processes in massive stars
  • Onion-like layers at the core of a massive, evolved star just before core collapses
  • Infrared image from NASA's [[Spitzer Space Telescope]] showing hundreds of thousands of stars in the [[Milky Way]] galaxy
  • The asymmetrical appearance of [[Mira]], an oscillating variable star
  • The [[reflection nebula]] [[NGC 1999]] is brilliantly illuminated by [[V380 Orionis]]. The black patch of sky is a vast hole of empty space and not a [[dark nebula]] as previously thought.
  • This view of [[NGC 6397]] includes stars known as [[blue straggler]]s for their location on the [[Hertzsprung–Russell diagram]].
  •  s2cid=121701212
 }}</ref>
  • Artist's impression of the [[Sirius]] system, a [[white dwarf]] star in orbit around an [[A-type main-sequence star]]
  • A cross-section of the [[Sun]]
  • Some of the well-known stars with their apparent colors and relative sizes
ASTRONOMICAL OBJECT CONSISTING OF A LUMINOUS SPHEROID OF PLASMA HELD TOGETHER BY ITS OWN GRAVITY
Stars; Stellum; Massive star; Stellar radius; Intermediate star; Intermediate mass star; Star fission; Stellar diameter; Intermediate mass stars; Star (astronomy); Intermediate-mass star
n.
1.
Heavenly body, luminary.
2.
Asterisk, figure of a star.
3.
Fate, fortune, destiny, lot, doom.
4.
Eminent person (particularly an eminent actor).

Wikipedia

Star (disambiguation)

A star is a luminous astronomical object.

Star, The Star or STAR may also refer to:

Examples of use of Star
1. The office figures also show that Antalya has 176 5–star hotels, 220 four–star hotels, 165 3–star hotels and 115 2–star hotels.
2. It is Star Wars: Celebration Europe, and I am (death) star–struck.
3. Forty channels are affected, including Star Movies, AXN, Reality TV and Star World.
4. Its one star makes us the lone star state‘‘ in Africa.
5. He became a two–star in 1''4 and added a third star two years later.