Yes it does.
Different parts of the Sun rotate at different speeds, which is how we know that the Sun isn't a solid. The equatorial regions of the Sun rotate in about 27 days, but the polar regions take a little longer; about 33 days.
The Sun does rotate.
In fact, the Sun does rotate.
Since the Sun is gas, different portions rotate at different rates. The gasses at the equator rotate once in about 25.6 days. At 60-degrees latitude, the gasses rotate in about 30.9 days. Polar regions rotate about once every 36 days. http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/sun/rotation.shtml
The Sun has differential rotation meaning that the Sun rotates at the equator once every 25.05 days and at the poles it rotates once every 34.3 days at a velocity of 7.189 x 10^3 km/h
No, the sun does not rotate around all planets. In our solar system, planets orbit around the sun due to its gravitational pull. The sun itself rotates on its axis, influencing the rotation of the planets but not physically orbiting them.
The answer depends on what needs to rotate. A second hand, hour hand, earth, sun, ballet dancer, spinning top? Who knows?
Yes. The Sun rotates every 25.5 days at the equator. Because the Sun is not solid, various regions rotate at different speeds. The polar regions rotate every 36 days, and in-between latitudes spin at in-between speeds.
The sun rotates on its axis approximately once every 27 days. This rotation period can vary slightly due to the sun's differential rotation, where different parts of the sun rotate at different speeds.
once every 365.25 days.. (a whole year)
Earth rotates around the sun .
It doesn't rotate around earth, but around the sun. This happens every 75-76 years on average.