As unusual as it may seem there is some evidence that there are pockets of water ice on the moon's surface, most of it in craters with interiors that never get direct sunlight. See link.
I think so yes
Yes, but only in solid form.
Roughly 0%. Water cannot exist in liquid form on the Moon's surface due to the lack of atmosphere and extremely low temperatures. Any water that may be present on the Moon is frozen in ice form.
There is no evidence to suggest that water on the moon contains protein. Water present on the moon, typically in the form of ice, lacks the necessary components for proteins to form. Proteins are complex molecules comprised of amino acids, which are not found in abundance on the moon.
The moon has trace amounts of water in the form of ice at the poles, and there is no significant atmosphere or wind on the moon. Any water present is thought to exist as ice in cold, permanently shadowed craters.
there is no water on the moon only some ice
No there is no water in the moon.The moon is just a type of rock.
Present theories suggest that the moon was formed when proto-earth and another mars sized body collided. The splatter from the impact coalesced into the moon (which was much closer in to the earth at this point. Since then the moon has mooved farther form the earth as it has slowed the earths rate of spin.
tide is one
No, it is no,t though there is water present on some parts of the moon.
craters form when a metorite strikes earth then resulting in a dent in the earths crust
There is plenty of water, in the form of ice, on the moon.
Dry as bone, there is no water except at the South Pole.