Poll: Define: Stardust?!


Question: It's a star that shines then disappears.


Answers: It's a star that shines then disappears.

AWWWWWWWW how sweet thank you Report It


Other Answers (20)




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  • it's ashy

    duh, the dust that is left behind from a falling star!

    isn't that what might mouse used to snort to get his strenght back in the day

    an old flamboyant casino on las vegas boulevard with terrible $9 steak specials

    A book by Neil Gaiman, recently made into a movie.

    Yes, I know, not what you're looking for...but I found it amusing.

    crap from a star.

    shes a P&Ser on here. ask her, she'll know best

    star that has turned into dust or a feeling or impression of romance, magic, or ethereality

    A mass of distant stars appearing as tiny particles of dust.

    the dust of stars

    the flickerings that drop when you stargaze

    Dictionary:
    star·dust /?stɑr?d?st/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[stahr-duhst] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
    –noun 1. (not in technical use) a mass of distant stars appearing as tiny particles of dust.
    2. a naively romantic quality: There was stardust in her eyes.
    My definition:
    Star particles that have specail qualities which may cause floating or flying.

    unseen for me.

    What makes up all heavy elements in the universe, making you and I. Elements only made by the heat and compression of a huge star. So mcdonnalds McSkillet is star dust and delish

    I remember Alvin!

    sorry i can't be much help i haven't seen the fim but i have heard its about a falling star!sorry

    Cosmic dust is a type of dust composed of particles in space which are a few molecules to 0.1 mm in size. Cosmic dust can be further distinguished by its astronomical location; for example: intergalactic dust, interstellar dust, circumplanetary dust, dust clouds around other stars

    Well, there's the romantic notion and then there's the more technical description. Earlier stars that have exploded have strewn their debris into the heavens, molecular clouds many light years long. Mostly composed of hydrogen, if the star was massive enough when it went supernova, you will find trace elements of all things, from gold down to ammonia. oxygen and sulphur. These clouds, over billions of years, condense in spots, and as they do, their core heats up due to thermal pressure of the gravity of all that stardust. When the temperature gets to 10 million degrees Kelvin, nuclear fusion is possible and a star is born.

    First name: Ziggy, and followed up by the spiders from Mars.

    It's not really a thing but something you see when you have gotten overboard after a good round of sex..



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