Not necessary. 5 stars are sufficient.
Burj Al Arab in Dubai, and it has seven stars
Usually the most is five, but the Burj Al Arab and the Burj Khalifa in Dubai have seven stars.
the names in India are chosen by holy people like saints, maulana, on the basis of stars, and moolas.. or on the names of great peoples.. who have done great in their lifes..
Route 222 - Fisherman Brett Grand Lake Hotel Seven Stars Hotel - Collector Eugene
Burj Al Arab in Dubai, and it has seven stars
it is a building near the complex of hotel grand lake. it is inside the vicinity of valor lakefront.
the hotel is 3 and a half stars
Forbes (formerly Mobile ratings) only goes to 5 stars. Never heard of anything over 5 stars.
None. 'Seven stars' is not an official classification for hotels. It's purely marketing. After some hotels had called themselves 'six star' hotels (like a five star hotel, but supposedly even better), other hotels called themselves 'seven star hotels', but nobody has given them this title (and, essentially, there is nothing that keeps you from calling a run down hole in the woods a 'seven star hotel' - it's a meaningless term).
Visit http://indianhotel-index.blogspot.com/for list of Indian five star hotels and hotel index.
The seven stars of the Matariki cluster are also known as the Seven Sisters in Greek mythology. In Māori culture, they are called Matariki, or the Pleiades. The names of the stars are usually translated as: "Tautoru," "Waipunarangi," "Ururangi," "Waitī," "Waitā," "Waipuna-ā-rangi," and "Tupuānuku."