No. Each of those "days" of which the question speaks is the length of time it takes
for the earth to spin on its axis.
The question is actually referring to the moon, which takes 27.32 days to spin once
on its axis.
It takes 1 sidereal day for the to earth to spin on its axis. That is 23.93447 hours.
They spin at a different rate on their axis than the Earth does on its axis.
27.32 earth days
1
it never stops spining. One complete rotation of the earth on its axis is called ONE DAY
For one axial rotation it takes 243 Earth days.
A Mercurian "day" the (time it takes it go spin once on it's axis) is equal to 58.65 earth days. Mercury turns on it's axis very, very slowly.
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.
10 hours. Or two and a fraction per Earth day.
The Earth spins on an axis.
The moon takes about 27.3 days to spin around its axis once, which is the same amount of time it takes to complete one orbit around Earth. This synchronous rotation is why we always see the same face of the moon from Earth.
It takes Mercury about 59 Earth days to complete one full rotation on its axis. This means that a day on Mercury (one full rotation) is equivalent to 59 Earth days.