Yes; they are second cousins.
The entire solar system coalesced from the same collapsing nebula, so yes, they might be considered to be "related".
The analogy would be moon is to lunar. Just like the sun is related to solar, the moon is related to lunar.
The distance between the Sun and the Moon is not related to the temperature on Earth.
The moon reflects the sun's light.
Neither. The Sun and the Moon both rotate around their own axis. See related questions.
The moon circles around the earth; the earth circles around the sun.
... as the earth moves? as in, an earthquake? Sorry, honey, but the sun and the moon have NOTHING to do with that.
because they are all spheres!
See related questions.
See related questions
They are both part of the Solar system
Yes. The Sun and the planets, including Earth, all were made from the swirling dust resulting from a really ancient large star that exploded. (A supernova)The moon was most likely torn from the Earth billions of years ago by a huge asteroid crash.So the moon is related to Earth, Earth is related to the Sun, therefore, all 3 are related to each other.
they are celestial object2nd Answer:The Sun and the planets, including Earth, all were made from the swirling dust resulting from a really ancient large star that exploded. (A supernova)The moon was most likely torn from the Earth billions of years ago by a huge asteroid crash.So the moon is related to Earth, Earth is related to the Sun, therefore, all 3 are related to each other.