It would depend on the context. It is usually used as a wildcard, or a pattern that will match everything.
Try asterisk.
Heil Hitler OR Bye Bye
An asterisk is not an idiom. It is a punctuation mark. It looks like a little star *
There is no such thing
The asterisk in a mathematical equation, usually in the context of a computer expression, means to multiply.
Normally it means to multiply....
a period means 'any single character'. A period followed by an asterisk means 'zero or more characters'.
If you mean in the scorecard, a not-out batsman is designated by an asterisk.
The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.The asterisk * character.
The asterisk symbol means 0 to many repetitions of the expression it follows. This means the regular expression "do*g" would match "dg", "dog", "doog", "dooog", ... or "(?>do)*g" would match "g", "dog", "dodog", "dododog", ...
You do not meet NMSC's requirements
You do not meet NMSC's requirements