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The Earth does a complete rotation on its axis every day. The Earth's rotation is the reason why we have night and day. So, if today is the 18th, the Earth has rotated 18 times this month.
360 times
There is approximately one complete rotation per day (more precisely, once every 23h 56m). A month can have 28, 29, 30 or 31 days, so take your pick.
The number of rotations the earth makes in a month depends on how long the month is. It takes the earth twenty-three hours and fifty-six minutes to make a complete rotation. The earth makes roughly 366 rotations in a year.
A day is defined as the time it takes the Earth to make one complete rotation on it's axis. For the sake of accuracy, understand a 'day' to be the standard 24 hour day. There are different kinds of day. And a complete rotation means a complete sidereal rotation.
The two motions that cause the Moon to show a complete cycle of phases each month are its orbit around the Earth and the Earth's rotation on its axis. As the Moon orbits the Earth, the angle between the Earth, Moon, and Sun changes, resulting in the various phases of the Moon. Simultaneously, the Earth's rotation allows us in New York State to observe these phases over the course of the month as the Moon rises and sets at different times. Together, these motions create the full lunar cycle we see each month.
The concept of a "month" doesn't really apply to any planet except the Earth. On Earth the month is closely connected to the Phases of our Moon. A month is not like a "day" or a "year" which depend on times of rotation and revolution of a planet.
The Earth takes 23 hours, 56 minutes to complete a sidereal orbit (the length of time the constellations appear to take for one rotation), but 1 day, or one rotation of the Earth on its axis is 24 hours.
In the time it takes Mercury to complete one rotation, Neptune rotates 87.37 times.
The Earths sidereal rotation period is 23 hours and 56 seconds. = =
The Earth rotates around its own axis in 24 hours. It rotates around the Sun in 365 days.
It depends on what you mean by a month. Some months have 30 days but others have 31 days. February has 28 days (and 29 in a leap year). The Earth rotates once every day. So you can work it out from there. In January there are 31 days and so there are 31 rotations. The Earth rotates in about 4 minutes less than 24 hours, if you want to be more exact. Also there's the "lunar month". That's the time taken for the Moon to go through all its phases. That's about 29.5 days. So, in that case, the Earth rotates about 29 and a half times per month.