You can't see a horn
next to the small dipper
It is a metaphor for someone who is not seeing a situation clearly, like a car at night with only one working headlight instead of two.
The location of the Little Dipper changes from night to night (although circling around every once in a long while). In order to find it, one needs to look for Polaris, or the "North Star". Polaris is part of the Little Dipper. If you know where the Big Dipper is, you can find the Little Dipper near it.
Fantastic question - The Big Dipper circles around Polaris, The North Star throughout the night.
you can see it better at night a about 12:00
you can only see the big dipper at night with a microscop
it is the big dipper, You can use the pointers of the Big Dipper as a star clock to tell the time.
like one of those measuring spoons.
The Big Dipper is the most recognizable constellation in the night sky.
Because of the rotation of the Earth.
Yes. The 2 stars in the front of the bowl of the bigger dipper, point to the end of the handle of the smaller dipper, which is Polaris, the North Star.
The parts when it's night. The big dipper is a circumpolar asterism and is visible year-round from most locations north of the tropics.