: any of various chiefly fall-blooming leafy-stemmed composite herbs (Aster and closely related genera) with often showy heads containing disk flowers or both disk and ray flowers
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Noun
Provide afternoon shade for asters grown in hot climates.—Patricia S York, Southern Living, 29 Apr. 2026 Plant marigolds and asters in the same sunny spot, and these two cheery and vivid summer blooms will thrive in the full sun, hot conditions.—Heather Bien, The Spruce, 24 Apr. 2026 Welcome wildlife, like bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, to your garden by planting pollinator-friendly plants, including bee balm, butterfly bush, asters, and more.—Madeline Buiano, Martha Stewart, 9 Apr. 2026 The Ring Pro is available in bionic gold, space silver, aster black, and raw titanium.—Boutayna Chokrane, Wired News, 25 Mar. 2026 See All Example Sentences for aster
Word History
Etymology
Noun
(sense 1) borrowed from New Latin, genus name, going back to Latin aster-, astēr "a plant, probably Aster amellus," borrowed from Greek aster-, astḗr "star, the plant Aster amellus"; (sense 2) borrowed from Greek aster-, astḗr "star" — more at star entry 1
Noun suffix
Middle English, from Latin, suffix denoting partial resemblance
: a system of microtubules arranged in rays around a centriole at either end of the mitotic or meiotic spindle
The first stage in the formation of the mitotic spindle in a typical animal cell is the appearance of microtubules in a "sunburst" arrangement, or aster, around each centrosome during early prophase.—Gerald Karp, Cell and Molecular Biology: Concepts and Experiments, 6th edition