It actually depends which way you go. If you go around following the equator you'll have to go 24,901.55 miles (40,075.16 km) to get back to where you started. However if you were to go from one pole to the other and back you'd only cover 24,859.82 miles (40,008 km). This is because the Earth is not a perfect sphere but has a slightly 'squashed' shape.
That's 4 times as much as going once around the Earth. The distance around the Earth is about 40,000 kilometers, or 40 million meters.
Earth revolves around the Sun once per year.
It depends how far it is from the sun. Like it takes Venus 225 (earth) days to revolve around the sun and it takes earth 365.25 days because earth is farther from the sun.
The Earth's Moon orbits around Earth once in a Month and the Earth orbits around the Sun once in a year, so the Moon orbits around the Sun once in a year too.
The moon spins around the earth once a month. The earth spins around the sun once a year and the earth spins on it axis once a day giving rise to night and day. So in answer to your question the earth spins around the sun and the moon spins around the earth.
The moon takes 28 days to travel once around the Earth. By coincidence - it also takes 28 days to rotate once on its axis. This means that the same side of the moon is always pointing towards the Earth
The sun does not travel around the Earth, Earth travels around the sun. The Earth rotates once every 24 hours.
The Hulk has been known to cover hundreds of miles in a single bound and once leaped almost into orbit around the Earth.
It is a bound rotation - the Moon rotates once every time it goes around the Earth.
The gravitational attraction of the sun causes the earth to revolve around the sun once a year.
Orbit
The Moon goes once around the Earth about every 28 days. The Earth goes once around the Sun every 365.4 days, or one year. Therefore, the Moon, while orbiting the Earth, goes around the Sun once a year.