A silver star in Latin is stella argentea.
Argentum.
Alpha latin... Mi star
Star Child
To twinkle = micare. Mica, mica parva Stella = Twinkle, twinkle little star
Stella is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "a star."Specifically, the Latin word is a feminine noun. It is not preceded by a definite or indefinite article since Latin has no equivalent to "the" or "a." But it may be preceded by una in the sense of "one": una stella ("one star").The pronunciation will be "STEHL-lah" in both the classical Latin of the ancient Romans and the liturgical Latin of the Church.
star decisis
argentum
Alpha latin... Mi star
stella nostra
I believe star in Latin is 'stella'. hoped i helped =)
Latin constellātiō < cōn ("'with'") + stēlla ("'star, astral body'")
The Latin plural noun meaning "stars" is stellae, astra or sideria.
Ad astra spe.
The phrase 'star of the month' means Stella mensis in Latin. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'stella' means 'star'. The noun 'mensis' means 'of the month'.
The Latin word for silver is argentum.
The Latin name for silver is 'Argentum'.
Silver Star was created in 1932.
Its origin is form Latin. The Latin word for silver is argentium