No. Venus is the Morning and Evening Star. Venus's proximity to Earth and its highly reflective cloud layer make it the second brightest object in the night sky after the moon.
Mercury is called the morning star and the evening star because it can be seen during the day and the night. Venus can also be seen in the day and night too.
Sometimes it's called the "morning star" or the "evening star".
The object called at various times, the Morning Star and the Evening Star is the planet Venus.
The evening star is called Bearrasta
The planet Venus is sometimes called the morning or evening star. It can be very bright if in the right place in its orbit, as seen from earth. It will sometimes appear to be the first star to come out at night or in the morning. It is often the third brightest object in the sky after the sun and moon. Sometimes Mercury is reffered to as a morning or evening star also, but it is usually a lot closer to the sun and more difficult to see.
Mercury
Mercury is called the morning star and the evening star because it can be seen during the day and the night. Venus can also be seen in the day and night too.
Mercury is called the morning star and the evening star because it can be seen during the day and the night. Venus can also be seen in the day and night too.
No, it's Venus. ur welcum
Sometimes it's called the "morning star" or the "evening star".
Venus and Mercury are both called the Morning Star when they rise before the Sun does. They are called also called the Evening Star when they set after the Sun.
Both Mercury and Venus have been known as the "morning star" or "evening star" in some form for various cultures and civilizations. Sometimes, these evening and morning appearances were thought to represent different "stars." (Of course, they are not stars at all and are rather the two planets closest to the Sun.) In ancient Greece, Mercury was called Apollo when it appeared as a morning star with sunrise and Hermes (the Greek equivalent of the Roman god Mercury) when it appeared as an evening star near sunset. Venus was also known to ancient civilizations both as the "morning star" and as the "evening star". The Greeks thought of the two as separate stars, Phosphoros and Hesperos, until the sixth century BC. The Romans designated the morning aspect of Venus as Lucifer (meaning Light-Bringer) and the evening aspect as Vesper. Venus is dramatic in the morning and evening sky while Mercury is smaller, dimmer and hard to see. (Most people have never seen Mercury and everyone has seen Venus whether they know it or not.) As a consequence, references to Venus are more common when the term morning star or evening star are made. (It is also true that sometimes any star that is the first visible start of the morning or evening is given such a name for that particular day.)
Venus is the evening star
Venus is the morning star or the evening star, depending on where Venus is in its orbit.
I think the answer is "Mercury". That's because it appears in the sky as the "morning star" and also as the "evening star".
Earth and Venus. From Earth Venus and Mercury are planets visible as "morning" and "evening" stars. From Venus, Mercury would appear in the morning and evening sky. From Mars I would expect Earth, Venus, and Mercury to all be morning and evening "stars."
Depending on where it and the Earth are in their orbits, the planet Venus can be either the "morning star" or the "evening star". In ancient times, some astronomers used the term for the planet Mercury, but in our light-polluted era, Mercury is tough to see.