The Latin word Star = Stella which I believe is the root word unless Im mistaken
A silver star in Latin is stella argentea.
Star Child
Alpha latin... Mi star
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
Stella is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "a star."Specifically, the Latin word is a feminine noun. It is not preceded by a definite or indefinite article since Latin has no equivalent to "the" or "a." But it may be preceded by una in the sense of "one": una stella ("one star").The pronunciation will be "STEHL-lah" in both the classical Latin of the ancient Romans and the liturgical Latin of the Church.
I believe the latin word for star is "stella". Stellae is the plural form.
Astra.
The phrase 'star of the month' means Stella mensis in Latin. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'stella' means 'star'. The noun 'mensis' means 'of the month'.
sidus
The word scale is said the same in Latin as it is in English. The word scale is said in Italian as scala.
A female given name from a Latin word meaning "star."
The root of the word constellation is Caelum.
Astra is the Latin word for star. That is where the first part of the words astronomy and astrology comes from.
Disaster is based on "astra" the Latin word for a star, also found in astrology, astronomy, astronaut, and the star-shaped flower, the aster.
From the greek aster to the latin Stella, which became in olde English estella and eventually star.
Yes, the word "astronomy" is derived from the Latin word "astronomia," which comes from the Greek words "astron" (star) and "nomos" (law) and translates to "law of the stars."
Star or occasionally something else astronomical, such as planet.