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"bona fed star" is not correct or commonly used in written English
It does not follow standard grammatical rules and it is unclear what the intended meaning is. It is possible that the intended phrase was "bona fide star," which means a genuine or legitimate star. Example: "The movie's bona fide star, Jennifer Lawrence, stole the show with her powerful performance."
Exact(50)
With one gig, Notaro had become a bona fide star.
The Hayemaker is a bona fide star and multi‑millionaire.
But Riley believes the referees have not accepted him as a bona fide star.
Fitz Hall, now of Wigan, was the bona fide star, having appeared in The Fifth Element.
There, she is a bona fide star with a Brit Award, the English version of the Grammy.
THERE is nothing quite like the satisfaction of seeing a promising young artist emerge as a bona fide star.
Similar(10)
Consequently, Keys is finally a bona-fide star in this country.
She's seen some of her colleagues, like Brittany Murphy, exchange the role of semi-anonymous starlet for that of bona-fide star.
It was wonderful to see a bona-fide star go about her duties, slipping her dress up over her panty crotch as she performed this year's finest song.
The general feeling is that Poots needs that one special role in order to go from being actress-on-the-rise to becoming a bona-fide star.
When he died, on his fifty-second birthday, the Belgian conceptualist was a bona-fide star, embraced by the very institutions he skewered.
More suggestions(2)
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com