Of course. You may have to wait a while but the rotation would be obvious.
We do not always see the same side of the moon, because while its orbiting the Earth, it is also rotating on its axis, as does Earth. The rotation of the Earth on its axis is what causes night and day.
Yes, since the moon is rotating around the earth, it is not always visible. If it is on the the other side of the earth, then a person could not see it. The difference is that the sun rises and sets because the earth is rotating on its axis, while the moon rises and sets because it is rotating around the earth.
In two ways. If you could observe it from outside the solar system you would see that it rotates on its own axis every day. Second is something known as Earth's precession, in which the orientation of Earth's axis moves in a circular fashion, completing one cycle every 26,000 years. Earth also orbits the sun, but that is not a matter of Earth rotating.
Light from the sun reaches the Earth through electromagnetic radiation, traveling through the vacuum of space as waves of energy. This light consists of various wavelengths, including visible light, which allows us to see objects illuminated by the sun.
The earth is MOVING ON ITS AXIS WHICH IS HOW WE CAN SEE THAT IT IS MOVING
because we only see half of the moon and the earth is rotating on its axis and we only see a crescent shape of it( I'm sorry if my answer is not right I'm not good at this)
The stars and planets are observed from the earth, and because the earth is rotating and tilting on its axis, and is also orbiting the sun, the stars and planets appear to be moving in relation to the observers view.
because earth is rotating around itself while revolving around the sun
Yes. The moon only revolves without rotating while the Earth revolves and rotates... Moon moves around the Earth, but not on its own axis. Earth spins on its axis and moves around the sun. Since they go at different speeds, someone on the moon would essentially be able to see all of the Earth (if they were up there long enough).
I'm not sure of what you mean but I think you got it right. Another way to describe it is if you are North of Earth, out in space, looking back, you would see Earth rotate counter-clockwise. If you were out in space from the South side of our planet Earth, you would see the Earth rotate clockwise.
Earth revolves around the sun. We can see that in the seasons, since Earth's rotational axis always points in the same direction no matter where Earth is in its orbit (actually the rotational axis rotates, too, but one rotation takes about 25,800 years).
If Uranus is rotating I think you should see a doctor