Yes. All the stars you can see at night are in the Milky Way.
The milky way is not a constellation
All constellations are within our galaxy - The Milky Way.
The Milky Way stretches through various constellations, so it does not belong to any one of them.
All constellations we see are within the Milky Way Galaxy.
All stars and constellations that we can see are in the Milky Way galaxy.
Yes. All the stars you see in the sky are in the Milky Way.
Yes, all constellations in the night sky are within the Milky Way.
All the constellations that we see, and there are 88 of them, are all in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
That is true, all the constellations are composed of stars which are part of the Milky Way. Other galaxies are seen by the unaided human eye as cloud-like nebulae, rather than point sources of light.
All constellations are within the Milky Way Galaxy.
There is a lot of stars in the Milky way. Constellations is better.
Constellations are not real, they are merely patterns of stars we see from our point of view. All of the constellations we see are part of the Milky way Galaxy and so are 10 billion other stars we can't see with the naked eye.