No. Stars are many times larger than planetesimals.
The process by which the larger planetesimals grow even larger, while the smaller ones are destroyed, might be called planetary accretion.
Massive stars are most likely to explode faster than smaller stars.
Most stars are smaller than the sun, falling into the red dwarf category.
Some stars are smaller than the sun, some are smaller, and some are about the same size. The sun is a star that is larger than average, but not out of the ordinary.
Stars are smaller than the moon because they are further away. They're not actually smaller, its just because they are so far away. Stars are actually very large.
Red stars can be smaller or larger than blue stars as there are two types of red star. Red dwarfs are much smaller than blue stars while red giants are much larger than blue stars.
No. Most stars are actually smaller than the sun.
That's an opinion, but if you meant temperature-wise, the answer would be smaller stars because of the gas and pressure.
Because they are farther away
They are not. The stars at night only appear smaller than the sun because they are much farther away.
Jupiter is not a star. It is a planet. However, there are stars that are smaller than the planet Jupiter.
The sun is larger than some stars but smaller than others. The smallest stars, not counting collapsed remnants, are about a tenth the diameter of the sun. The largest are more than 1,000 times the sun's diameter.