of course it does
No. the light of the moon is always reflected sunlight.
They are shining from reflected sunlight - any you know how bright the sun is.
reflected
By the sunlight reflected off the Moon's surface and the position of the Moon on its orbit.
No, it's just reflected sunlight
Sunlight
No, it cannot. Virtually all the light we see from the moon is reflected sunlight; the moon is not putting out energy.
No. the light of the moon is always reflected sunlight.
The Moon's light is reflected sunlight.
Reflected sunlight, for sure, travels from the Earth to the Moon. Reflected sunlight from the Moon also travels to Earth. That is why we can see the Moon.
They are shining from reflected sunlight - any you know how bright the sun is.
reflected sunlight
The moon's light is really reflected from the sunlight that hits the moon.
Reflected earthshine. Which is sunlight reflected from earth.
The reason appears to produce its own light because the light the light from our sun is reflected off of it.
70%
reflected