No.
No. The earth rotates once in about 24 hours. The sun rotates once in about 32 days.
because earth rotates, and the sun stays the same.
yes because the earth rotates <-that way and the moon rotates <-thatway so yes!!!!!!
yes the earth rotates around the sun
The Earth normally rotates anticlockwise as seen from the north. If you mean 'if the Earth rotates the opposite way', then its position in January (relative to the Sun) could be the same. The four seasons would also be roughly the same.
The part of the moon that is always in sunlight is the "near side" of the moon, which faces Earth and receives light from the sun. This is the side that we see from Earth, as the moon rotates at the same rate that it orbits Earth, keeping the same side facing us.
All planets (in our solar system) have the same sun. All the planets rotate around the same sun that Earth rotates around.
the earth rotates on an axis. When it rotates, half of it is exposed and half of it is not.
The Moon rotates on its axis in the same time that it takes to orbit the Earth. So, one side always faces the Earth, and the other side faces away from Earth. The Moon revolves around the Earth once (and rotates once) in 27.3 days. Earth rotates in about 24 hours. Earth revolves around the Sun in about 365 and a quarter days.
Your question is unclear. However if the earth keeps rotating on its axis and the orbit around the sun does not then the earth would fall into the sun.
The Earth rotates in not a perfect circle around the sun but in a oval shape.
The Earth rotates in not a perfect circle around the sun but in a oval shape.