Yes, all constellations in the night sky are within the Milky Way.
All constellations are within our galaxy - The Milky Way.
All the constellations that we see, and there are 88 of them, are all in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
All of them.
CONSTELLATIONS
All constellations are within the Milky Way Galaxy.
It is the Andromeda Galaxy
one thing galaxy's have planets but not constellations another... constellations look like that the stars are close but the aren't
That doesn't make sense. A constellation is basically a direction in space; you don't count constellations per galaxy or similar regions in space. There are 88 or 89 constellations (depending how you count them); these constellations cover all the directions around us, and are not related to any specific galaxy.
All stars and constellations that we can see are in the Milky Way galaxy.
Constellations are not real, they are merely patterns of stars we see from our point of view. All of the constellations we see are part of the Milky way Galaxy and so are 10 billion other stars we can't see with the naked eye.
All of the stars in the Milky Way Galaxy are moving... however, we, in our lifetime, will never notice the constellations changing.
Constellations are stars put together, usually to form a ancient figure in the stars, a galaxy is much different, They have planets and in galaxies you can find constellations. Big difference