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Definitions

astronomy

[uh-stron-uh-mee] / əˈstrɒn ə mi /


Example Sentences

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“In astronomy, or any other science, this would have caused a massive scandal. In aging science there was not even a shrug.”

From The Wall Street Journal • Jun. 5, 2026

"A year in orbit pushes both hardware and humans into a different operational regime compared with the shorter Shenzhou missions of the programme's earlier phases," the professor of physics and astronomy told AFP.

From Barron's • May 23, 2026

"Gravitational-wave astronomy is now doing more than counting black hole mergers," explains lead author Dr. Fabio Antonini from Cardiff University's School of Physics and Astronomy.

From Science Daily • May 8, 2026

She later earned a doctorate in astronomy from Harvard and in 1927, she became the youngest astronomer ever to have a star of distinction next to her name in the publication American Men of Science.

From BBC • Apr. 22, 2026

By 1588 astronomy had become concerned with the organization of the heavens in three dimensions, not just in two.

From "The Invention of Science" by David Wootton



Vocabulary lists containing astronomy


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