yes
The big dipper looks like a big spoon in the sky
you look at the brightest star in the sky then you follow a chain of stars to the big dipper
Both the big dipper and the little dipper look like pots.
A big spoon!
the formation of stars, through the gathering of certain gases. the stars in the big dipper arrangement just happen to look like a big dipper, hence its name
Technically, yes. But not fast enough for the change to be noticeable in the course of a human lifetime. I've seen a drawing of what the shape of the Big Dipper will look like in 1,000 years from now. It's different, but clearly recognizable as the same Big Dipper.
How did WHAT look like, please make your questions answerable.
The Big Dipper stars and the north star are light years away from each other. it just LOOKS like they are near each other. In several hundred centuries, the Big Dipper won't even look the same because the stars in it are expanding away from each other at different relative rates.
The big dipper looks like a big spoon in the sky
you look at the brightest star in the sky then you follow a chain of stars to the big dipper
Both the big dipper and the little dipper look like pots.
A big spoon!
the formation of stars, through the gathering of certain gases. the stars in the big dipper arrangement just happen to look like a big dipper, hence its name
The ancinet Greeks thought the Big Dipper looked like a big bear.
Like a spoon. I'll try to illustrate it: (LOOK AT THE DOTS_ .______________________ _._____________________ ___.___________________ ______.___________._____ _______________________ ________.________.______
The Big Dipper never changes. It always looks the same no matter what time of year it is.
The people of England thought the Big Dipper looked like a number 5.