0 a star that is so far from the earth that it seems not to move in relation to other distant (= far away) stars as the earth moves through space -- 恒星
As seen relative to the fixed stars, it rotates exactly three times for every two revolutions it makes around its orbit.
This is a separation which, historically, is essentially grounded in the thought of the realm of the fixed stars, as the realm of being in opposition to becoming.
The fixed stars exhibit real motion as well, however.
Its methods, its tactics and its manoeuvres may change, but the polar star of its policy—world domination—is a fixed star.
He looks at a fixed star.
The time when a given fixed star crosses the observer's meridian depends on the geographic longitude.
How do the sun and the moon hold to their courses and the fixed stars keep their places?
The concept of inertial frames of reference is no longer tied to either the fixed stars or to absolute space.