It doesn't have a name. We've never even seen it. Each constellation has a particular area of the sky associated with it. That region has hundreds of billions of stars in it, most of them in distant galaxies far too far away from us for us to be able to see them individually. The dimmest star in Orion that's been named will have a catalog designation along the lines of HD348933 (I just made that number up; I have no idea where that star actually is), which isn't very catchy.
The dimmest star is Orion is HD 37605 with an apparentmagnitude of 8.69
Deneb is the dimmest star in Cygnus.
Gliese 229 is the dimmest star in the constellation Lepus
dimmest stars in aquarius
ORION is the English name for star
Rigel is the brightest star in Orion, Betelgeuse is the 2nd brightest
The seven brightest stars in the Orion constellation form an asterism called the "Orion's Belt." These stars have varying magnitudes, with the brightest star, Rigel, having a magnitude of approximately 0.18, and the dimmest star, Meissa, having a magnitude of around 3.42.
Bellatrix is in the constellation of Orion.
The dimmest star in the Pegasus constellation is likely to be one of its fainter stars, which may not have a common name but is listed with a designation such as HD 209087 or similar. These dim stars may be harder to observe with the naked eye or small telescopes due to their low brightness compared to brighter stars in the constellation.
Betelgeuse is the star in Orion that is known as a red supergiant.
Castor
Polaris is the name of the North Star. Sol is the name of the star we call our sun. Another star is Betelgeuse, one of the stars in the beautiful constellation Orion.