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two-star

[ too-stahr ]

adjective

  1. of or being a major general, as indicated by two stars on an insignia.


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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Critics had mixed thoughts about the new songs - the Guardian called them "disappointingly flat-footed" in a two-star review and said the lyrics "too often serve as exposition rather than raising the emotional drama".

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One of the hotels was a Motel 6 in Westlake just a few blocks south of MacArthur Park — a fortress-like structure with a two-star rating — and another was a two-story Motel 6 in Gardena, the suit claims.

From

In a two-star review, The Guardian slammed it as "ugly and tasteless", Decider said it "takes advantage of people's greed", while gaming site IGN said the show was "shallow", "dull" and "almost entirely devoid of anything to get invested in".

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There was a two-star review from The Telegraph's Tim Robey, who called it a "queasy drama" that "repackages domestic violence as slick romance".

From

The Independent called the show "toothless and vapid" and its two-star review said the documentary "fails to challenge him in any serious way, and is instead a portrait of a curious, attention-seeking family".

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