| ERIDANUS | Long twisting constellation in the southern hemisphere containing the first magnitude star Achernar |
| LYRA | Small constellation in the northern hemisphere containing the star Vega |
| SNAKE | Move in long, twisting curves |
| BOLOGNA | Long twisting snake outside Italian city |
| AURIGA | Large northern constellation (the Charioteer) containing the first-magnitude star Capella (6) |
| ORION | Large constellation on the celestial equator containing the first magnitude stars Betelgeuse and Rigel (5) |
| CANISMINOR | Small constellation containing the first magnitude star Procyon |
| CANISMAJOR | A constellation in the Southern hemisphere close to Orion, containing Sirius, the brightest star in the sky (5,5) |
| FOMALHAUT | A star of the first magnitude in the constellation Piscis Austrinus |
| BETELGEUSE | A first-magnitude star in the Orion constellation (10) |
| CENTAURI | see 24ac, First magnitude star in the constellation of Centaurus also called Rigil Kentaurus |
| DENEB | First-magnitude star in the constellation of Cygnus (5) |
| ALPHA | First magnitude star in the constellation of Centaurus also called Rigil Kentaurus (5,8) |
| ANTARES | A first magnitude star in the Scorpion constellation (7) |
| ALPHACENTAURI | First magnitude star in the constellation of Centaurus also called Rigil Kentaurus (5,8) |
| MUSCA | A small constellation in the Southern Hemisphere, lying between the Southern Cross and Chamaeleon (5) |
| ARGO | Formerly a large constellation in the southern hemisphere between Canis Major and the Southern Cross. |
| RIGEL | First-magnitude star in the constellation Orion (5) |
| ALTAIR | First-magnitude star in the constellation Aquila (6) |
| LUPUS | Constellation in the southern hemisphere named after the wolf (5) |