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stardom

[ US /ˈstɑɹdəm/ ]
[ UK /stˈɑːdəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. the status of being acknowledged as a star
    stardom meant nothing to her

How To Use stardom In A Sentence

  • (Variety's Dennis Harvey called Mr. Friedman's onscreen persona "nebbishy"; The Boston Globe's Wesley Morris was a little nicer, saying, "The movie is the product of his big, shiny love of forgotten soul legends whom superstardom ... has eluded.") Did Pirated 'Wolverine' Review Get Fox 411's Roger Friedman Fired? [Update]
  • Her number one single shot her to stardom.
  • Dozens of wannabe singers compete for the chance to attain pop stardom. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think the more you do the more you encourage the myth of fame and stardom.
  • And in the world of stardom, the perfect smiles are mostly down to cosmetic dentistry. The Sun
  • She was plucked from obscurity to instant stardom.
  • Even though her storyline - which follows João on the road to stardom, with several stopovers in prison - can seem underdeveloped, Ramos is always charismatic.
  • My creative juices boil at the prospect of national stardom.
  • You still have to surpass some threshold of stardom to get all that free time.
  • The stab at rock stardom, the attempt at talk-show hosting, the game show his brother Mark unapologetically called "dopey," all those dabbles are in the past. John McEnroe's Next Frontier: Home
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