Yes, by one twelfth.
yes you can se star and night at the same every night because every night there are stars.
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.
No. Because when the Earth is rotating that is how we get night and day. But the stars don't change from night and day.
He interviews various stars every night.
The stars are always there, but you cannot see them every night because the sky will be covered with clouds on some nights. If you were to go above the clouds you could see them.
It lights the sky and design with the stars every night....
Yes, because the Earth moves.(as well as the stars and the other bodies)
You don't. The stars you see at night in the winter are not the same ones you see in the summer. Earth takes a full year to revolve around the sun, so the stars will not appear very different from one night to the next, but you would notice a change if you watched carefully over the course of several months.
The Earth's axis always changes so you will see some stars one night but they change throughout the year
Shooting stars appear every night.
Google Earth has a detailed map of the stars on it. Just select 'Stars' from the 'Earth' and 'Stars' menu. I really like the one at Skymaps and use it every month.
No, they actually set four minutes earlier every night.