The term was coined by NASA to refer to men traveling into space.
It means "star traveler" / "star voyager" / "star sailor."
The Latin root astron (from aster) means "star" and the root nautes means sailor, voyager.
Mr.Armstrong was only an astronaut. An astronaut has to do the missions that arer assigned to them. The president was the one with the idea, and the reason for that was to beat the soviets.
No, the noun 'astronauts' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'astronaut', a general word for someone who is trained to travel in a spacecraft.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'astronauts' is the names of the astronauts.
to become an astronaut you have to be 2 years old
An astronaut. And it's spelt 'female'.
The duration of The Astronaut Farmer is 1.73 hours.
No, the word 'astronaut' is a noun.
The word astronaut is a noun, a word for a profession of people. The word astronaut is singular, common, abstract noun.
No, the word astronaut is not capitalized in that sentence.
"An astronaut" is the correct form, not "a astronaut." "an" is used instead of "a" whenever the word it modifies begins with a vowel.
About any sentence that you can make like: " the astronaut works for Nasa." Notice the "the" at the start? That is the mostly used word for "astronaut".
Yes, the noun 'astronaut' is a common noun, a general word for any astronaut anywhere.
An astronaut is a commander, pilot, or a crew member of a spacecraft. In Russia an astronaut is known as a cosmonaut.
The silent letter in the word "astronaut" is the letter "a."
astronaut
No, the word 'astronaut' is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The noun 'astronaut' can be replaced by the third-person, personal pronouns he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object in a sentence.Examples:The astronaut handled the emergency just as she had been trained.When the astronaut completed the run, the trainer gavehim a rest.
A-S-T-R-O-N-A-U-T. Astronaut.
Yes, the word astronaut is a common noun, a word for any astronaut anywhere.A proper noun is a word for a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:American astronaut Alan Shepherd and Soviet cosmonaut Yuri GagarinUnited States Astronaut Hall of Fame, Titusville, FLAstronaut Street, Lakeport, TX or Astronaut Avenue, Las Vegas, NV"Astronaut Training", a novel by Ronald C. Thompson