What is the meaning of STARS. Phrases containing STARS
See meanings and uses of STARS!Slangs & AI meanings
A general-purpose exclamation that could be used to express either frustration or excitement.
Very prominant sideburns. Derives from the British cop show 'The Sweeny' Where the main stars sported fantastically groomed sideburns.
LSD
Worn by a sailor who is able to perform celestial navigation.
A Southern pronunciation of the word stairs, like bar for bear.
This was an order used on Imperial starships as a general alert.
Common name, especially for famous Black sports stars.
Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)
Starsky and Hutch is London Cockney rhyming slang for the crotch (crutch).
A young man of substandard intelligence, the typical adolescent who works in a burger restaurant. The 'no-stars' comes from the badges displaying stars that staff at fast-food restaurants often wear to show their level of training.
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a.
Full of stars; starry; as, stellar regions.
v. i.
To sparkle, as the fixed stars.
v.
To appear above the horizont, as the sun, moon, stars, and the like.
v. t.
To turn into a star; to cause to appear like a star; to place among the stars, or in heaven.
a.
Spangled or studded with stars.
prep.
To denote having as a possession or an appendage; as, the firmament with its stars; a bride with a large fortune.
a.
Of or pertaining to stars; astral; as, a stellar figure; stellary orbs.
n.
The doctrine of the Sabians; the Sabian religion; that species of idolatry which consists in worshiping the sun, moon, and stars; heliolatry.
n.
A chart or catalogue of fixed stars, especially of stars visible to the naked eye.
n.
A shining with intermitted light; a scintillation; a sparkling; as, the twinkling of the stars.
a.
Having, or abounding with, stars.
n.
A spectroscope arranged to be attached to a telescope for observation of distant objects, as the sun or stars.
a.
Having the shape or appearance of little stars; radiated.
n.
An astronomical instrument, the limb of which embraces a small portion only of a circle, used for measuring differences of declination too great for the compass of a micrometer. When it is used for measuring zenith distances of stars, it is called a zenith sector.
n.
Asteriated sapphire.
n.
See Nostoc.
n.
A small constellation near the South Pole, containing three bright stars.
n.
The light of the stars.
a.
Seen or discoverable only by a telescope; as, telescopic stars.
n.
A libration of the starry sphere in the Ptolemaic system; a motion ascribed to the firmament, to account for certain small changes in the position of the ecliptic and of the stars.
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