Im not sure I understand your question fully, but stars don't stay in one place. They are, in fact, revolving around the centre of the galaxy (which is an enourmous black hole)
Most stars orbit around the center of a galaxy. Some stars are parts of star clusters; in that case, they will also orbit around the center of the star cluster.
A star, or stars.
No, all stars aren't suns. A sun is a star that is at the center of a solar system. Planets rotate around the sun. Planets don't rotate around a normal star. A star can be found anywhere around the universe. That's not the case with planets. Planets have to be in a solar system and a sun has to be in the center. If this is the case with a star, then that star can be called a sun.
No, most stars orbit the center of their galaxies. There are many types of star systems. For example, binary stars orbit each other.
the ochre star, the bat star, the leather star, the basket star, the candycane star... from the Bamfield marine biology science center (BMBSC) -E
Two stars that are close together will orbit each other. More precisely, they will orbit around their common center of mass. The two stars are called a binary star in this case.
That's called a double star.
Jupiter and stars are both spherical (ball-shaped) and they both orbit a larger body of some sort. Jupiter orbits our Sun, and stars orbit the center of their galaxy, and sometimes stars orbit another close star.
Stars are made of very very hot gas inside a star are nuclei but mostly electricity on the center of a star is ice stones mostly iron or any other things that the gravity of the stars attract
The stars are too far away of Earth's gravity to have any noticeable effect on them.
The only star in our solar system is the sun. The sun is in the center of the solar system.
The Milky Way is a disk of stars with the sun near the center.