Stars actually do rotate.
The North Star!
The North Star, or Polaris. This star remains nearly stationary in the sky while all other stars seem to rotate around it due to the Earth's rotation on its axis.
earth
They rotate with an amazingly stable rotation rate.
no just the earth
It doesn't. A lot of stars seem larger and brighter than it. In fact, Polaris is the 49th-brightest star in the sky. To us, it is not a particularly bright star. It is important because it seems to be still as other stars rotate around it.
because stars come from the blake hole
All stars rotate (spin). Some spin faster than others, but all stars will rotate as without this rotation, the star will literally fall into space.
If you look at the stars at the same clock-time every night, the whole picture will appear to rotate 1 degree per day, 30 degrees per month.
Some planets seem brighter - not all of them. Planets are quite near to us, as compared to the stars.
Neutron stars rotate rapidly due to their conservation of angular momentum. When a massive star collapses into a neutron star, its core spins faster as it contracts. Since angular momentum is conserved, the neutron star continues to rotate rapidly as a remnant of the collapsed star.
In the Northern Hemisphere, when facing North, towards the Pole Star (Polaris) Ursa Major and surrounding constellations, rotate counter-clockwise (right to left).Turn round to face south (with Polaris behind you) the stars rotate clockwise (left to right).