No. Stars generate their own light, and are far more massive than any comet. Comets don't shine at all; they merely reflect the light of the Sun.
From our perspective here on Earth, some comets appear to be brighter than stars, but only because the comets are here in THIS solar system, relatively nearby, while stars are many light-years away.
Comets orbit stars
Quasars A+
Because they are closer or actually brighter.
It is better to say that the sun appears brighter because it is closer. Some stars are actually brighter than the sun.
Because it is nearer that the stars.
'Appear' would become 'appeared' in the past tense so the sentence would simply be 'some stars appeared to be brighter than others'.
moon is too nearer to earth than stars
Nubula does not exist.
The big stars have more hydrogen to burn and has much more surface area thats why it shines brighter.
Some planets seem brighter - not all of them. Planets are quite near to us, as compared to the stars.
The sun appears bigger and brighter than other stars because it is much closer to Earth compared to the distant stars. Stars are actually suns, but they look tiny and faint because of their immense distance from us.
There are many stars that are brighter than the sun. Deneb shines the brightest in the constellation Cygnus and is much farther from Earth than most of the other stars you see. Deneb is about 100,000 times brighter than the Sun. HR 5171, has a diameter 1,300 times the sun and is a million times brighter than the sun. R136a1 weighs up to 300 times the mass of the Sun and is close to 10 million times brighter than the sun.