Well, basically the sun shall send off its nuclear power and send it down to earth so we will all start to burn and earth shall become the sun. The sun then shall suck all the people from earth, towns and cities to it in lightspeed, and then the sun shall become earth.
Hope this helps.
Uhh... no
Yes, some things can disappear. By disapear, if you mean visually, sure; it happens all the time.
Color can appear to disappear due to phenomena like color adaptation, where our eyes adjust to a specific color and it appears less vibrant over time. Additionally, the absence of light can also make colors appear to disappear, especially in low light conditions.
Shakespeare used the elements and natural world as a method to describe in his stories. The audience knew what stars looked like and to compare her eyes to stars gave the listener a visual image of her eyes. Remember, this is the time before photos, film, and the computer and images had to come from the imagination.
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Yes sometimes it can disappear in time, and is called burnt out colitis
The full quotation, which is "Two of the fairest stars in all the heaven, having some business, do entreat her eyes to twinkle in their spheres till they return." makes it very clear that this is personification alright. The image is that a couple of stars need to take a break from shining in the sky (maybe they need to go to the bathroom), so they ask Juliet's eyes if they would like a part-time job while the stars are gone. If that isn't personification, I don't know what is.
No, by the time star light reaches your eyes, the stars have moved on. So we see the stars in a position as they once where.
The Matariki stars, part of the Pleiades star cluster, appear to "disappear" in late autumn as they become less visible in the night sky due to the changing position of the Earth in relation to the stars and the rising of the Sun. This phenomenon occurs as the stars are obscured by the Sun's light during the longer days of summer. Matariki, or the Māori New Year, is celebrated when the cluster reappears in the early morning sky, signaling a time for reflection and renewal.
Under ideal conditions (no lights, unclouded, no dust, good eyes), you can see 2000-3000 stars at any time of the year.
The light you see are from stars long dead and so when you look into the night you see back into the time when these stars shone brightly . It took light-years for this light to reach across time and space to be seen by your eyes .
Some will, some won't. Depends who you write to and how busy they are at the time.