Sentence examples for a stardust from inspiring English sources

The phrase "a stardust" is not correct in standard English; it should be "stardust" without the article "a." You can use "stardust" when referring to the cosmic material that makes up stars or metaphorically to describe something magical or enchanting.

Example: "As she danced under the night sky, it felt as if she was surrounded by stardust, creating a magical atmosphere."
Alternatives: "cosmic dust" or "celestial particles."

Exact(6)

His career boomed through the 1970s and 80s, giving a stardust glitter to formula game shows like The Price Is Right and Play Your Cards Right.

I mean, how would I explain 'Fifty Four' to a committee?" The new musical's plot follows the rise and fall of Steve Rubell, the nightlife impresario who made Studio 54 into a stardust Valhalla, where hordes of people waited hopefully on the rope line as boldface names waltzed past the Rubell bouncers.

If politics is showbusiness for ugly people, as a wise man once suggested, Olympic-tinged politics propels its ill-prepared performers into a stardust land of their own imagining – into some neon-lit combination of Broadway, Sunset Boulevard and the West End, with a hint of the Cannes Film Festival mixed in for good measure.

There may be something as nice as getting all dressed up and dancing to something Gershwinish with a good-looking man in a dark suit, but I have never found it, and this is why I find myself, on a recent three-day weekend, at a Stardust Dance Weekend at a hotel in the Catskills.

Though it is likely to produce some kind of reward, it likely will be limited in some other way, via a stardust or candy cost, to prevent people gaming the system.

Buy a Stardust Dragon tin and put in Stardust Dragon and Junk Warrior.

Similar(54)

In "2001," evolution amounts to a little stardust, a little murder.

Soriana's strategy, in short, was to offset its higher prices with a little stardust and a better understanding of Mexicans' middle-class aspirations.

Instead she has dazzled corporate diners bringing a little stardust to proceedings – what she calls being a "K-list" celebrity.

It was first commissioned by a gentleman in Japan who had previously purchased a Lady Stardust fuzz pedal.

Ms. Daly realized her fantasy of being Édith Piaf with a wistful "Stardust," sung in French.

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