Astrologer
If a person's name is Stella, that is her name regardless of what language you are speaking. As a common noun, "stella" is Italian for "star."
North star, or Polaris, is the name of a bright star that is CURRENTLY near the celestial north pole. Since the position of the north pole will change in the future, Polaris will still be called Polaris, but it will no longer be the north star.
2009 Star Wars: The Future Begins, the 11th of 12th Star Wars films released May 8 2009.
Uhura
flea
No one in life can be a super star for easy, but if some body is really talented and really good person every thing will be good with him, and you have to try again and again till you be a really super star in the future.
Ty Law, former NFL star
In the past it was a main sequence star. In the future it will be a giant star and will cool off.
"He is a shining star in our company" is an example of an indirect metaphor, where the person is compared to a star without using "like" or "as" to make the comparison explicit.
The simple future tense of "stars" would be "will star." For example, you could say, "They will star in the new movie." In this construction, "will" indicates the future action, while "star" is the base form of the verb.
It really depends on which lieutenant that your referring to. Whose army and which person in it.
Polaris is the name used for the star above the North Pole. It used to be Thuban. Then Kochab was nearer the celestial pole and now it is Cynosura. In the future, it will be Elrai.