They both look like stars. which is what an ast stands forish.
An asterisk is not an idiom. It is a punctuation mark. It looks like a little star *
A cats anus is the area where you put your finger to take their temperature, believe me I'm a proctologist.
A star-shaped punctuation mark, also known as an asterisk (*), is used to indicate a footnote, reference, or to highlight specific information in a text. It can also be used for emphasis or to symbolize multiplication in mathematical equations.
There will be an asterisk next to baseball players that used steroids.If you hold shift + 8, you will type an asterisk.An asterisk looks like a deformed star.
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The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5The star or asterisk, like this:=A5*C5
its called a asterisk
Asterisk
In most junior school work it will look like the letter x. Computers, though, use the asterisk (star) symbol, *. In college or university mathematics you are more likely to use the full stop: as in a.b
A mark like a six-pointed star which looks like this: *
An asterisk. asterisk In language it's an asterisk ... but to a programmer it's called a "splat".