This is a Latin word that changed over time.
In the oldest archaic Latin (pre-classical), the word was caelus, pronounced kai-loos.
In classical Latin, "sky" or "heaven" is caelum, pronounced kai-loom.
By the medieval period, in Church Latin usage, it had changed to coelum (although the earlier spelling was still sometimes used). Now it was said cheh-loom.
The Latin word for sky is caelum, caeli, a second declension neuter noun.
Star is "Stella"
Sky is "Caelum"
so maybe "Stella Caelum" ?
"puteulanus divum"
Schola caeli
The Latin phrase for "new star" is "nova stellarum". Since the early astronomers spoke Latin for the most part, when we see a "new" star appear in the sky, we call it a "nova".
The name "Astra" derives from the Latin word for "star" and is associated with the sky or heavens. It is a unique and beautiful name choice for a girl, symbolizing vastness and wonder like the sky itself.
Cael. The Latin word for sky is caelum, and the word for heaven is caeli
The yellow star in the sky is the Sun.
Sirius also known as the dog star is the brightest star in the sky.
Another Star in the Sky was created in 1994.
The brightest star in the sky at any time is the sun.The brightest star in the night sky is Sirius, in the constellation Canis Major.
Caelum.
If you want the translation of "star": a star = une étoile (the sky = le ciel)
Nova is the Latin word for "new" and Latin was the language of early modern astronomy, as of all science in medieval and Renaissance Europe. A suddenly glowing star in the night sky would be considered a "new star" or "stella nova." This eventually was shortened to "nova."
It depends. In many cases the first "star" you see in the evening sky is Venus, which is a planet.
Caelum.