Below your feet.
If you are standing on the full moon you would be facing the earth at night.
it would look small
The Earth's atmosphere moves right along with the Earth. If it didn't, then anybody standing on the equator would be standing in a 1,000 mph wind !
It would be elongated and opposite to the sun. In which direction it will face depends on where you are standing on Earth.
Waning gibbous.
No, you can not get to the center of the earth. The core of the earth, which is the center of the earth, is way to hot. It would be like standing on the sun, but though the core of the earth is EXTREMELY hot, it can not compare to the heat of the sun
I believe it is because it the Earth spins and sometimes things seem closer than how they really are.
If you were standing on the Moon, it would be easy to notice a solar eclipse; the Earth would block out the Sun, all over the Moon, for an hour or so. On the Earth, we would have called it a lunar eclipse. From the Moon, it would be difficult to notice an Earth eclipse; the shadow of the Moon on the Earth, so obvious when you're in the dark at midday, wouldn't be so obvious from 250K miles away; a small dark circle on the Earth.
"Standing still" IS a measurement relative to the Earth. Relative toother things, you are moving with high speeds in complicated paths.But relative to the Earth, you are standing still.
No because you are standing on a angle on the moon so you would not see more than one side of the earth
When it occurs, a solar eclipse is visible over only a portion of the earth. In order to see it, you must stand: -- at a place on earth where the eclipse will be visible, -- outdoors -- in the daytime, i.e. between the hours of sunrise and sunset
If you went directly from where you are standing straight through the earth until you got to the other side, the distance that you would travel would be the diameter.