It depends on where the planets are in their orbits relative to Earth. In many cases the first object you see may be a planet as the five planets visible to the naked eye are brighter in our sky than the stars.
It depends. In many cases the first "star" you see in the evening sky is Venus, which is a planet.
Venus. (In fact, Venus is a planet, but it is often called the "morning star" or the "evening star".)
its the pole star, it is seen the first and foremost at night.
a star is way bigger than a planet. you need a telescope to see some of the planets.a star twinkles.a planet glows.
you go to the skate park and go left and you will see presents
a planet has it's own weak gravity that pulls the star it's orbiting as it orbits, as the star gets pulled around by the planet, scientist on Earth see the star wobbling, and then they know there is a planet!
Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star. See related questions,
get the cloud flower, go on the cloud on top of the tree that you first see, then you'll see a pink luma that will ask you to get him an amount of coins. give him that a new planet will be born. finish the task on the new planet and you'll get the hidden star.
The first extra-solar planet (in other words, circling a star and not our sun) was discovered in 1995.
Venus is a planet, not a star. It is sometimes called the Morning star and the Evening star because it is often the first object in the night sky to be seen in the evening and the last to be seen in the morning. Whether you see it in the morning or the evening depends on where it is in its orbit.
sister planet.
Daily Star