A traditional star has five points.
A star of david has six.
A star must have at least five points, but can have infinately more.
Depends on what you mean by a star. For instance are sun has no corners.
But the standard way to draw a star is with 5 corners.
Stars are spherical bodies and have no sides nor corners.
A 3D star is not a standard shape. You can easily add another point.
A standard five-pointed star, often referred to as a star polygon, has 10 corners (or points) and 5 sides. Each point of the star represents a corner, while the lines connecting these points form the sides. However, the number of sides and corners can vary with different types of star shapes.
The astronomical object does not. A model does.
As many corners as sides.
5*2=10 corners in total
Stars are spherical bodies and have no sides nor corners.
If you meant "corners" as points, the Star of Bethlehem was always regarded as an 8-Pointed star. In Greek, writing the name of Christ sums up to 888. All baptismal fonts have 8 corners.
A 3D star is not a standard shape. You can easily add another point.
A standard five-pointed star, often referred to as a star polygon, has 10 corners (or points) and 5 sides. Each point of the star represents a corner, while the lines connecting these points form the sides. However, the number of sides and corners can vary with different types of star shapes.
The magen star is the star of David - a star with 6 corners
An actual star (that is, one that is in space), doesn't really have any corners since it's a big ball of gas. If you mean the traditional star shape, they generally have 5 points. There are such things as 4 pointed stars. The Star of David, a traditional Jewish symbol, has 6 points.
The astronomical object does not. A model does.
As many corners as sides.
It has 4 corners
8 corners
8 corners