I assume that you wish to add an asterisk to the end of each word that has a length of at least 4 that does not already end with an asterisk and is not within a string delimited with double-quotes.
Assuming your strings are well-formed in the sense that the number of double-quotes is even, you can replace the content of capture group 1 of matches of the following regular expression with an asterisk appended to the content of capture group 1:
(\w{4,})(?!\w|\*|[^"]*"(?:(?:[^"]*"{2}))*[^"]*$)
Demo
The regular expression can be broken down as follows.
(\w{4,}) # match >= 4 word characters
(?! # begin negative lookahead
\w # match a word character
| # or (alternation)
\* # match '*'
| # or
[^"]*" # match >= 0 chars other than '"' then '"'
(?: # begin a non-capture group
(?:[^"]*"){2} # match >= 0 chars other than '"' then '"' in
# a non-capture group
{2} # execute the above non-capture group twice
)* # end non-capture group
[^"]*" # match >= 0 chars other than '"' then '"'
$ # match end of string
) # end negative lookahead
Note that
[^"]*"(?:(?:[^"]*"{2}))*[^"]*$
asserts that the current string location is not followed by an odd number of double-quotes (that is, the current string location is not within a string delimited by double-quotes).
Another way is to use a regular expression that first attempts to match what you don't want (words within double-quoted strings) and if that fails attempt what you do want that is saved to a capture group, paying no attention to the matches, only to the capture group:
"[^"]*"|(\w{4,})(?!\w|\*)
Demo
As you see at the link
Cats in "some very* stylish" hats
is converted to
Cats* in * hats*
as it shows matches being converted to $*
, but by limiting the substitutions to capture groups we get the desired result:
Cats* in "some very* stylish" hats*
Confining the substitutions to capture groups is done programatically, which of course depends on the language being used (which has not been identified in the question). In Ruby, for example, one could write:
str = 'Cats in "some very* stylish" hats'
str.gsub(/"[^"]*"|(\w{4,})(?!\w|\/) { |s| s[0]=='"' ? s : $1+'*' }
#=> "Cats* in \"some very* stylish\" hats*"
The two methods I have given are supported by most regex engines. There are, however, other ways of doing this that make use of features supported by limited numbers of regex engines.