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View synonyms for

constellation

[kon-stuh-ley-shuhn]

noun

  1. Astronomy.

    1. any of various groups of stars to which definite names have been given, as Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Boötes, Cancer, Orion.

    2. the section of the heavens occupied by such a group.

  2. Astrology.

    1. the grouping or relative position of the stars as supposed to influence events, especially at a person's birth.

    2. Obsolete.character as presumed to be determined by the stars.

  3. a group or configuration of ideas, feelings, characteristics, objects, etc., that are related in some way.

    a constellation of qualities that made her particularly suited to the job.

  4. any brilliant, outstanding group or assemblage.

    a constellation of great scientists.

    Synonyms: , ,


constellation

/ ˌkɒnstɪˈleɪʃən, -trɪ, kənˈstɛlətərɪ /

noun

    1. any of the 88 groups of stars as seen from the earth and the solar system, many of which were named by the ancient Greeks after animals, objects, or mythological persons

    2. an area on the celestial sphere containing such a group

  1. a gathering of brilliant or famous people or things

  2. psychoanal a group of ideas felt to be related

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

constellation

  1. A group of stars seen as forming a figure or design in the sky, especially one of 88 officially recognized groups, many of which are based on mythological traditions from ancient Greek and Middle Eastern civilizations.

  2. An area of the sky occupied by one of the 88 recognized constellations. These irregularly defined areas completely fill the celestial sphere and divide it into nonoverlapping sections used in describing the location of celestial objects.

constellation

  1. An easily recognized group of stars that appear to be located close together in the sky and that form a picture if lines connecting them are imagined. Constellations are usually named after an animal, a character from mythology, or a common object. (See Big Dipper, Ursa Major, and Ursa Minor.)

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Other Word Forms

  • constellatory adjective
  • subconstellation noun
  • ˌDzԲٱˈپDzԲ adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of constellation1

1275–1325; Middle English constellacioun (< Anglo-French ) < Late Latin DzԲٱپō- (stem of DzԲٱپō ). See constellate, -ion
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Word History and Origins

Origin of constellation1

C14: from Late Latin DzԲٱپō, from Latin com- together + stella star
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A Closer Look

Various cultures throughout history have chosen different groups of stars in the night sky to form different constellations. While it was once thought that the Greeks were responsible for determining many of the constellations known today, it is now believed that the mythological origins of the 48 ancient constellations predate the Greeks and originate instead from ancient Middle Eastern civilizations. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries another 40 constellations were invented by Europeans for navigational purposes. The boundaries of the 88 constellations currently recognized were defined in the 1920s by the International Astronomical Union. There is no scientific reason why there are exactly 88; the modern constellations are only a convenient way to break up the sky to locate the position of celestial objects or track satellites. Although the stars in any given constellation may look like they're neighbors, they can actually be many light-years apart, and if seen from another part of the galaxy they would form different groups and shapes altogether. Constellation names are usually given in Latin, such as Ursa Major (Great Bear) or Centaurus (Centaur), and individual stars in constellations are named in order of brightness, using the Greek alphabet, with the genitive case of the constellation following. Therefore, Alpha Centauri is the brightest star in the constellation Centaurus, Beta Centauri is the second brightest star, and so on. The stars within our galaxy are rushing through space in various directions, and as the millennia pass, the arrangements of the star groups as seen from Earth will change, inevitably altering the constellations as we know them.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

There will be a chance of seeing the showers whenever the radiant point in the constellation Boötes is above the horizon.

From

All these years later, and with a constellation’s worth of additional competition, it’s still one of the most downloaded and streamed podcasts going.

From

So there was great excitement when DMS was discovered on a "sub-Neptune planet" far from our solar system – 124 light years away, or about 17 trillion miles, in the constellation Leo.

From

The Democratic Party is a constellation of 50-plus state and other local parties, and there are many organizations which are—or should be—independent of the party.

From

Even movements led by feminists and Black separatists resonate with the same constellation of beliefs, as Borden demonstrates with harrowing examples.

From

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When To Use

else doesconstellation mean?

A constellation is a way of thinking about sexuality by considering sex, gender, sexual orientation, and gender expression as separate components (like stars) that together make up one's gender and sexual identity (constellation). are some other words related to constellation?

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