Bigger stars get hotter, and use up their fuel much faster than smaller stars.
I am pretty sure the table you consulted lists only the extremes - but of course you can have thousands or even millions of "near" stars and "bright" stars, depending on how far down the list you go. Note that any list of the first thousand (for example) nearest stars would probably be incomplete, since there are many dim stars (red dwarves) that are very hard to detect.
All stars will eventually run out of hydrogen and die.
The more water the seeds get the quicker they will grow. The less water they get they will die.
Most stars usually die out
because some part of your body will damaged more quickly than other places, so it will be replaced more quickly.
Stars tend to burn out and die, so when they are first created they tend to be brighter and more intense. When they are under super intense pressure by gravity when they die they become hotter and much bigger after shrinking by approximately half its size...then it explodes.
No, big stars die out in a few million years whereas little stars may take billions or even trillions of years to die. This is because big stars use all of their energy up very quickly because they need to use lots of energy to keep them alive.
Grow more quickly
Yes, you can die if hit by a bus. A bus is bigger than a car and has more weight & needs a bigger stopping distance.
It depends on the severity of the cut. If you cut an artery, you are more likely to die, or at least more quickly.
Yes. The more massive the star, the faster if develops - and the faster it grows old and dies. A very massive star will die in a supernova explosion, which may result in a neutron star or a black hole.
No because smaller stars can live longer than bigger stars and the big stars wont live as long but will end in a very violent explosion.That can result in a major supernova and even a black hole smaller stars will die in a much less violent way.
all stars will eventually die and normally the bigger the star the more impressive the death is. all stars do explode and they are called novas or super novas. this is the result of gravuty "winning the fight." not all stars do this because they become black holes instead. the sun will have a normal death sadly because of its size and normal star temp.
yes. stars are aged like us and eventully they will blow up. But more stars are formed. Some stars blow up, some don't. It depends on their mass. Stars having more than 3 times the mass of our sun will blow up when they die, stars having less than 3 times the mass of our sun will not blow up when they die instead they will just shrink and cool.
There are 200 billion stars in the milky way, with 90 percent of them being main sequence, most of these are sun like. (I cannot find any solid information that says the sun is anything but the perfect example of the average main sequence. Bigger stars die quickly, smaller stars are nearly invisible to us [dwarfs].) This means 180 billion stars are like the sun, but due to uncertainty, and tiny size of most of these, on a personal educated Hypothesis, I believe there to be about 100 billion stars that are sun-like and stable enough to support a solar system.
Stars are born in a Nebula and die by burning out their energy.
Primarily in mass. Smaller stars are smaller and dimmer, and live longer; more massive stars are bigger, LOTS brighter, and die sooner. A small star - or even an average star like our Sun - will last for billions of years. A giant star like Betelgeuse or Sirius will go supernova and blow itself apart in only a few million years.