starry

IPA: stˈɑri

noun

  • A surname.

adjective

  • Having stars visible.
  • Resembling or shaped like a star.
  • Full of stars or celebrities.
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Examples of "starry" in Sentences

  • It pans to the starry night sky.
  • The starry masses have awakened.
  • Maybe I'm a starry eyed optimist.
  • He was not a starry eyed idealist.
  • He is described as a starry king .
  • The winged globe, the starry blue,
  • This article is pretty starry eyed.
  • The starry sturgeon is a harmless species.
  • Mainly a collection of starry eyed trivia.
  • Finally he retained the eighth starry sphere, which he held to be unmoving.
  • It is the same with what is now called the starry with angular projections.
  • The so-called starry dogfish bears young the most frequently; in other words it bears twice a month.
  • It is the same what is now called the starry array, many modern forts being constructed on this plan.
  • As I recall your starry names, no blush hinting unmannerliness suspect and unconfessed hits me on the cheek: --
  • I have been called a starry eyed worshipper often enough for my support of Obama, but he had a competitive organization.
  • "Must be allowed to be what they call a starry night for a ramble," admitted the mate, trying to find speech to fit the occasion.
  • I hate this stupid straw man that everyone who favors Obama is some kind of starry eyed dimwit who doesn't see the True Obaman underneath the glitz.
  • They pass from mouth to mouth like salutations; and even the minds which lose their words are under their influence, as one can recall the starry heavens who cannot revive the form of a single constellation.
  • Any articulation of this idea runs the risk of sounding like some kind of starry-eyed hippy jive-talk, but I really think that our ability to deal with most of the crushingly complex problems we're facing pivots on whether or not we can actually be honest with one another.
  • Although the golden age of classical record industry produced some wonderful – and of course wonderfully preserved – music making, part of the trouble with it has always been the normative power it has held over the way we hear music, generating myths about "definitive" interpretations, stagnating performing traditions and turning the culture of classical music into a kind of starry-eyed collectors 'club.

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synonyms for starrydescribing words for starry
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