No.
The direction that they rotate does. Storm systems in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while ones in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise. Tropical systems in both hemispheres tend to travel westward.
What you are talking about is the Coriolis effect. In the northern hemisphere currents rotate in a clockwise rotation and in the southern hemisphere current rotation is in an anti clockwise rotation.See related links below
Your question is very vague. To "rotate" something, you grab it and turn it in a different direction.
They don't. That is a myth. The direction that a toilet flushes depends on how the toilet is designed, not what hemisphere it's in. Due to the Coriolis Effect, large scale weather systems and ocean currents rotate in opposite directions in opposite hemispheres, but this effect does not influence things on the scale of toilet bowls.
Yes, tornadoes in the southern hemisphere typically rotate counterclockwise due to the Coriolis effect. This effect is caused by the rotation of the Earth and influences the direction of rotation of weather systems in different hemispheres.
you rotate left
Yes. By definition a hurricane must rotate, however, they rotate in opposite directions. Storms in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise.
Two gears rotate in the same direction when they are both either on the same side of the gear train (parallel arrangement) or they have the same number of teeth. They rotate in the opposite direction when one gear is driving another gear and they have a different number of teeth.
Not necessarily. Comets can rotate in either direction on their axis, some rotate counterclockwise while others rotate clockwise. The direction of rotation is determined by various factors such as the direction the comet formed or collisions it may have experienced.
That means that if you observe from the north, it would rotate counterclockwise - the direction opposite of the rotation of a clock's hands.
To change the direction of your paper, simply rotate it clockwise or counterclockwise until it is positioned the way you want. Alternatively, you can flip the paper horizontally or vertically to achieve a different orientation. Experiment with different angles until you find the desired direction.
Counter clockwise