yes
NO, because it is not possible. Every plutoid is a dwarf planet but every dwarf planet is not a plutoid.
YES, obviously, because every plutoid is a dwarf planet but every dwarf planet is not a plutoid.
I think you mean "Pluto" not "luto". Yes, Pluto is a Plutoid. It's the example that all the Plutoids are named after.
No, it's a "dwarf planet".
no it use to be but is now called a plutoid
A plutoid or ice dwarf is an icy object similar to Pluto, smaller than most true planets. Plutoids are not considered true planets because they have been unable to clear smaller debris from their orbital paths.
Yes, Eris is the largest Plutoid (dwarf planet). It is further out than Pluto, but is larger than Pluto. There are also Haumea and Makemake. There are others as well, but so far these are the only ones named as being a dwarf planet/Plutoid.
a dwarf planet - or - a plutoid, a word coined specially to categorise it and other bodies like it.
No, Cerus is not a dwarf. It is actually a dwarf planet, specifically classified as a plutoid by the International Astronomical Union.
From the Sun out it is: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto (a dwarf planet or plutoid).
The eight planets that orbit the sun are (in order from the sun): Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. Another large body is Pluto, now classified as a dwarf planet or plutoid Hope I helped
No Pluto has been re-classified as a "plutoid" or a miniature planet. There might be another large planet beyond Pluto bur no one has been able to identify it yet. Whet it will be called if found is anybody's guess.