Yes, easily, because the Sun is much bigger than all the planets combined. The Sun could also swallow up all of the dwarf planets as well.
The Latin word for sun is sol so solar would represent the sun and system would be all the eight planets.
The Sun and the eight major planets are part of our solar system.
There are eight planets that circulate our sun.
Eight, as Pluto and Ceres are now classified as dwarf planets. The other eight planets are (in order of distance from the Sun):MercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
None. All eight planets in the Solar System revolve around the sun.
The sun, each of the eight planets is in orbit around our sun.
The Latin word for sun is sol so solar would represent the sun and system would be all the eight planets.
The sun is the primary source of external heat for all eight planets, although in the case of some planets it doesn't provide a lot of heat. The sun also is the largest single factor affecting the orbits of the eight planets.
The Sun and the eight major planets are part of our solar system.
In about 6 billion years as the sun is finally "dying" it will expand and swallow Mercury, Venus, and Earth. That is all.
Neither. The eight planets orbit the sun, but in space there is no "under" or "over."
Yes. Earth is one of eight planets in our solar system, all of which are in an orbit around our central star which we call the sun.
There are eight planets that circulate our sun.
Because they all orbit the sun
Eight, as Pluto and Ceres are now classified as dwarf planets. The other eight planets are (in order of distance from the Sun):MercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
He jumps onto all eight planets, then the sun, then the moon and explodes.
They are satellites of our sun, as with the eight major planets. They orbit the sun directly.