yes yes yes
Mercury. There are many smaller bodies orbiting the Sun but they are not classed as planets.
The largest satellite bodies orbiting the central star in our solar system are the gas giants: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. These planets have numerous moons, with Jupiter having the most satellites, including the largest moon in the solar system, Ganymede.
There are a total of 214 moons orbiting planets in our solar system.
A series of planets orbiting a star is called a Solar System
The Solar System. In capital letters like this, the phrase refers to OUR solar system, back before we knew that planets are apparently quite common. The term "solar system" in lower case can refer to the system of planets and solid bodies orbiting any other star.
Our solar system consists of the sun, eight planets, and various smaller celestial bodies orbiting around it.
A moon? I don't think a planet orbiting another planet would be called a planet.
The Solar System
Yes, the solar system consists of a large central star (called the sun for our solar system), with planets that ore in orbit around it. There are other bodies in orbit around the sun also, such as minor planets, asteroids, comets, and other small objects.
As the sun is the biggest celestial body in our solar system, so it has the most gravitational pull and therefore the planets n other celestial bodies revolve around the sun.
No. There are more than that. There are currently 173 known moons orbiting planets in our solar system and many more orbiting dwarf planets, asteroids, and comets.
A solar system is a collection of celestial bodies, including a central star (often referred to as a sun) and various planets, moons, asteroids, and comets that orbit around it due to gravitational forces. The most well-known example is our own solar system, with the Sun at its center and eight planets, including Earth, orbiting around it.