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What would be some ways to say "next star", "the next star" or something very similar in Latin?

By next I mean next as in "the next star to visit/conquer/study", not "next" as in the closest one.

2 Answers 2

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I'd go with stella secunda myself.

The main words for "star" are stēlla, astēr, astrum, and sīdus, with astēr and astrum being borrowings from Greek (and the latter especially being poetic/pretentious) and sīdus primarily meaning "constellation"; stēlla is native, and also the word that survived into the Romance languages, so it strikes me as the most neutral choice.

There are a few options for "next" as well, but secundus (which does also mean "second", of course) seems good to me: it's derived from the verb sequi "to follow" and also generally has positive connotations. Posterus, in contrast, can also mean "inferior" or refer to the last in a series, neither of which feels desirable.

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    What about sequens?
    – Rafael
    May 8, 2021 at 20:25
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    @Rafael I can't really back this up, but to me that feels like it imparts to much agency to the star itself in this context, or too much inevitability to the sequence. Obviously you can use sequens with basically inanimate nouns (sequenti anno &c.), but I don't think I'd use it unless I were talking about the past.
    – Cairnarvon
    May 8, 2021 at 20:46
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I would say:

Astrum posterum

In contrast with proximus, which is often taken in the sense of "near", posterus means

coming after, following, next, ensuing, subsequent

As @Cairnarvon mentioned, posterus can mean "inferior" (it only means "last" in its superlative form, so that's irrelevant), but the same is true of secundus, which, according to Lewis and Short, can mean: "second in rank, value, etc. [...] With the prevailing idea of subjection or inferiority, secondary, subordinate, inferior."

I chose astrum as opposed to some other words that means star because of its familiarly and consistency with the popular Latin phrase:

Per aspera ad astra

Through hardships to the stars.

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