The typical galaxy has somewhere around 1011 stars (if you write that out, that's a one with 11 zeros); the observable Universe is estimated to have 1011 galaxies. If you multiply that, you get an estimate of 1022 stars for the observable Universe. The actual Universe is probably much larger, but nobody currently knows how much larger.
The yellow star in the sky is the Sun.
Sirius also known as the dog star is the brightest star in the sky.
Another Star in the Sky was created in 1994.
The brightest star in the sky at any time is the sun.The brightest star in the night sky is Sirius, in the constellation Canis Major.
As many as the stars.
If you want the translation of "star": a star = une étoile (the sky = le ciel)
No. Sirius is the brightest star in the night sky. Polaris is much farther down the list.
There no how many is in the sky because stars always came out and you can't count it so there's how many stars in the sky because it very much - kandy
It depends. In many cases the first "star" you see in the evening sky is Venus, which is a planet.
The sun is much closer to Earth than any other star, so it appears much larger to us.
The homophone for "sky" is "sigh."
Not at all. When compared to the other stars, there is NO star that shows any apparent motion in as little a time as 8 weeks. The star with the fastest "apparent motion" is Bernard's Star, sometimes called the "runaway star". If you could memorize the night sky when you were young, and compare it to the sky when you are dying of old age, you MIGHT be able to notice this one star having moved, just a little.