shamayim shel laila (×©×ž×™×™× ×©×œ לילה)
The word that is used for a group of stars in the night sky is a star cluster.
The Hebrew word for lightning, that flash of light in the sky, followed by thunder, is ba·raq, with the emphasis, when speaking, on the last syllable.
שמיים - Shamayim (shah mah' yeem)
Heaven, referring to the afterlife, is never mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. There is no Biblical Hebrew word for this concept. However, Early modern English translations used the word "heaven" as a poetic word for sky, and the word sky (שמיים) appears 653 times. Many Christian translations continue to use the word "heaven" in their translations, when the word שמיים in the Hebrew text is either referring literally to the sky, or figuratively, to God.
gas
Sora means "sky" in Japanese.
The Hebrew word for star is kokhav (כוחב) and it's used for both movie stars and stars in the sky. You can also use the word selebritai (סלבריטאי) which means celebrity.
Moon
Laila means night, Ha-Laila: Tonight.
The Hebrew word "matara" (מָטָרָה) means "rain." It refers to the precipitation that falls from the sky in the form of water droplets. In Hebrew literature and culture, rain is often symbolic of blessings, abundance, and fertility.
It means the stars. The night sky in general.
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.