As of September 2008[update], 335 bodies are formally classified as moons. They include 167 orbiting six of the eight planets, 6 orbiting three of the five dwarf planets, 104 asteroid moons, and 58 satellites of Trans-Neptunian objects, some of which will likely turn out to be dwarf planets.
There are expected to be more yet to be discovered.
mercury has no moons at all
13 Moons all together
If you count in pluto, there are 135 moons. If not, there are 134 moons.
there are 139 moons altogether.
The number of moons on Uranus is 27, they all have names.
Uranus has 20(twenty) moons all together.
Venus has no moons at all, not even one.
no. Earth and Mars are the only terrestrials with moons.
Likewise with Venus , Mercury has no moons. All the other planets in our solar system have moons with Tritan, one of the moons of Jupiter being the biggest
No, not all terrestrial planets have many moons. For example, Mercury and Venus do not have any moons, while Earth has one moon (named Luna or the Moon), and Mars has two small moons (Phobos and Deimos).
Jupiter has 79 confirmed moons, and all except 4 have been named.
Not sure what you mean by this. All the moons in space are moons.