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    • \ ˈstär \

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    [Noun]  | "star" | \ ˈstär \


    1: a natural luminous body visible in the sky especially at night

    2: a self-luminous gaseous spheroidal celestial body of great mass which produces energy by means of nuclear fusion reactions

    3: a planet or a configuration of the planets that is held in astrology to influence one's destiny or fortune —usually used in plural


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English sterre, stere "star, planet, constellation," going back to Old English steorra (Northumbrian stearra), masculine weak noun, going back to a Germanic n-stem paradigm *sterōn (nominative), *sterraz (genitive), going back to pre-Germanic *h2stér-ōn, *h2ster-n-ós (whence also Old Frisian stēra "star," Old Saxon & Old High German sterro, Middle Dutch sterre, and, with reintroduction of *-rn- from oblique forms with presumed initial stress, Middle Dutch sterne "star," Old High German sterno, Old Icelandic stjarna, Gothic stairno), going back to Indo-European *h2ster- "star," whence, with varying thematizations, Old Irish ser "star" (attested once), Welsh sêr "stars" (singular seren), Old Breton sterenn "star," Greek aster-, astḗr "star (usually in reference to a particular heavenly body)," ástra "stars" (with a secondary singular ástron), Tocharian A śreñ "stars," Tocharian B ścirye "star," Sanskrit stār- (nominative plural tā́raḥ, instrumental plural stṛ́bhiḥ), Avestan star-, Hittite ḫašter-; with a suffixal -l- Latin stēlla "star, heavenly body" (perhaps < *stēr(e)lā), Armenian astł (perhaps < *h2stēr-l-);

      * Note : The etymon *h2ster- is attested in all major subfamilies of Indo-European, with the apparent exception of Balto-Slavic and Albanian. The original paradigm can be reconstructed as *h2stḗr (nominative), *h2stér-m̥ (accusative), *h2str-ó-s (genitive); it is preserved best in Greek. The Germanic forms show the action of Kluge's Law (to those who accept it), according to which *-rn- is reduced to a geminate *-rr- before an accented syllable. The original *-rn- has found its way back into the base form in North and East Germanic, but only partially in West Germanic (it is lacking completely in Anglo-Frisian). The Indo-European etymology can be carried further, if the base *h2ster- is see:n as a reduction of *h2h1ster-, an agentive derivative of *h2eh1s- "burn, make dry with heat" (see: {arid|arid}); the star would hence the thing that burns or glows (see: D. Adams, A Dictionary of Tocharian B, Revised and Greatly Enlarged [Rodopi, 2013], p. 701). A different and less straightforward derivation is proposed by G.-J. Pinault ("A Star Is Born: A 'New' PIE *-ter- Suffix," A.J. Nussbaum, editor, Verba Docenti [Ann Arbor, 2007], pp. 271-79). Earlier proposals that see: the origin of the Indo-European star etymon in the names of Semitic deities of the morning and evening star (Phoenician *‛aštart, rendered by the Greeks as Astártē; Akkadian ištar) now see:m improbable.;

    [Adjective]  | "starlike" 


    1: as in star-spangled;


    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Noun]  | "star" 


    1: a ball-shaped gaseous celestial body that shines by its own light;


      * e.g., " ... it's difficult to see the stars at night in the middle of the city because of all the streetlights "





    2: the person who has the most important role in a play, movie, or TV show;


      * e.g., " ... when the star of the school play came down with the flu on opening night, her understudy got to go on "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    3: a person who is widely known and usually much talked about;


      * e.g., " ... the public's endless fascination with stars "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





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