See also: rock star

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rock +‎ star

Noun edit

rockstar (plural rockstars)

  1. A member of a rock band, or a solo artist in the genre, especially one with celebrity status.
  2. (figuratively, sometimes used attributively) A person who is renowned or revered in his or her field of accomplishment.
    • 2008: Fareed Zakaria, The Post-American World, Chapter VII
      Eventually Clinton relented and went to India in March 2000. He spent five days in the country, visited famous sights, put on traditional clothes, and took part in dances and ceremonies. He communicated the message that he enjoyed and admired India as a country and civilization. The result was a transformation. Clinton is a rock star in India.
    • 2010 April 25, “The IoS Happy List 2010”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 24 May 2014:
      Science has long had an image problem but Dr Cox—also known as the rockstar physicist—has done the unthinkable and made particle physics cool.
    • 2012 March 30, “The Three Reasons Romney Needs Chris Christie On His Ticket”, in Forbes, retrieved 24 May 2014:
      Christie has managed to become a rockstar among conservatives nationally while pursuing an agenda that is in many ways moderate.
    • 2013 March 24, Rory Carroll, “Downtown Las Vegas may have found what it's looking for”, in The Guardian, UK, retrieved 24 May 2014:
      Tony Hsieh is a rockstar software developer who's turning his attention to urban regeneration in Las Vegas.
  3. (figuratively, sometimes used attributively) Any animal, plant, or other thing that is renowned amongst others of its type.
    Owls are the rockstars of the bird world.

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