Star in a sentence as a noun

You have the words "rock star" or "ninja" in your description.

A nice faved/starred page would show stats and maybe last commit/activity.

The sequence I propose assumes that you are starting from scratch, just like we were.

But the real work starts after… From initial meeting to “sale” could take months… or years.

Perhaps, one day, people will start bringing their instruments to parties again!

I'd be thrilled to work for a Google or Microsoft, but what would attract "rock star developers" to Fog Creek?

Some of those stars were just gifted amateurs who had mass appeal the moment they walked in from the wilds.

Star in a sentence as a verb

As I was scrolling through I started to notice a really nice, subtle star background pattern that wasn't moving.

You see it all the time, there are tons of businesses started and run by intelligent and driven women.

This is annoying, since generally titles are cheesy and can be really problematic at startups.

I interview, and one of them has the right mix of board members to think that a young and energetic "shooting star" is just what they want to kick their revenue in the rear.

But as someone who continually talks about hiring "rock star programmers", I simply don't see a result that I'd consider "rock star" equivalent.

You could make a lot more money by promoting a star and making everyone want a small number of records than you could by recording everything under the sun!

When you get really good you can even start reprocessing a scene or a model, deconstructing it in your mind and then reconstructing it via some other technique.

Star in a sentence as an adjective

You'll be able to gather detailed audience feedback on each film, and at the end of that two years, with a mountain of data behind you, you'll start to have a very strong idea of what sells and what doesn't.

But, maybe I'm missing something?Edit: More than that, I don't even consider myself a rock star developer, just a normal developer who loves learning new things and getting a lot of stuff done.

If you have backing from ‘top tier’ investors or a star advisor that your prospect will have heard of, use in your subject lineii.\tThe first sentence of the email must establish your credibility.

Perhaps, as we listen to superstars less and to ordinary people more, the pressure to play like a superstar or not play at all will drop away and we'll reclaim the tradition of participatory music that we've been robbed of.

This is classic entrepreneurship and there is nothing more sinister about JPMorgan having to compete with a star player launching their own fund than there is Google having to pay out to top performers who may otherwise do well launching a start-up.

First, before you even start trying to get a meeting, these 2 things must both be true:• You have a strong hypothesis of what Company X’s specific pain point is, informed by research• If your hypothesis is right, there is a >50% chance that your product can actually solve their pain pointIf both of the above are not true, do not proceed.

It is an absolute trainwreck, but aside from that, the primary issue for consumers now is that apps built with Phonegap no longer work correctly on newer versions of Android and haven't for months, which is why Gabriele's extremely simple and resource-minimal app is currently getting a bunch of 1- and 2-star reviews in the Google Play store with complaints about the speed.

Star definitions

noun

(astronomy) a celestial body of hot gases that radiates energy derived from thermonuclear reactions in the interior

noun

someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any field

noun

any celestial body visible (as a point of light) from the Earth at night

noun

an actor who plays a principal role

See also: principal lead

noun

a plane figure with 5 or more points; often used as an emblem

noun

a performer who receives prominent billing

See also: headliner

noun

a star-shaped character * used in printing

See also: asterisk

noun

the topology of a network whose components are connected to a hub

verb

feature as the star; "The movie stars Dustin Hoffman as an autistic man"

verb

be the star in a performance

verb

mark with an asterisk; "Linguists star unacceptable sentences"

See also: asterisk

adjective

indicating the most important performer or role; "the leading man"; "prima ballerina"; "prima donna"; "a star figure skater"; "the starring role"; "a stellar role"; "a stellar performance"