Subj : astronaut To : Ivan Shmakov From : Roy Witt Date : Tue Jun 12 2018 14:57:40 Ivan Shmakov wrote to Roy Witt: RW>> But there is no 'n' in astro, even if the word was derived from the RW>> Greek word astron. IS> FWIW, there is no "es" in "naut," either. I agree with that, but, nauts does indicate more than one naut. RW>> A star is something regarded as resembling such a celestial body. RW>> When you see the glowing body of the International Space Station RW>> (ISS) fly overhead, that fits the description of a star. IS> It doesn't. Not to me, at the least, for it flies just too fast IS> to be a star. (Why, it moves even faster than the planets!) A meteor is often referred to as a shooting star...y'all had one of those fly over and crash land into Russia recently. IS> But then, neither can I understand Japanese using "aoi hoshi" IS> (= blue star) to mean Earth. They were probably impressed by the photos taken from the moon that show the Earth in blue. R\%/itt --- GoldED+/W32 1.1.5-31012 --- D'Bridge 3.92 * Origin: Lone-Star BBS - San Antonio, Texas - USA (1:387/22) .