No, as only one side of Earth can be facing the Sun, which is our main source of light. Moonlight isn't strong enough to light up the Earth to the same extent.
No, the whole Earth cannot be lit at the same time due to the natural rotation of the planet. This rotation causes different parts of the Earth to be in darkness while others are in daylight.
no
No, the sun can only caste sunlight (daylight) over the surface of the globe (earth) that is facing towards it at any one time.
All the continents are approximately the same age as they separated around the same time.
Shakespeare wrote the whole play Julius Caesar at about the same time, around 1598. It is thought to be the play which opened the Globe theatre in 1599.
The eastern side of the time zone would receive sunrise an hour before the western side would. Lines of latitude are 15 degrees apart (1 hour), which evenly divides the Earth into 24 equal sized strips, making each time zone "an hour difference." To simulate this, take a globe and divide it into 24 equal sections (preferably using time lines). Turn the lights off and shine a flashlight on the globe from a far enough distance to shine light on the whole globe. Slowly spin the globe, noticing how the light falls on it.
Because you can't the same size and shape at the same time.
because the world is a sphere and so not all the world can point at the sun at the same time
Yes, that is correct.
ummm... a circle? :D
The puritents destroyed the globe theatre the second time around.
the clock identifys the time in some parts of the globe