No. The world is split into timezones, roughly 24 different zones for each of the 24 hours, roughly drawn through longitudal lines.
Yes, but it is never spring everywhere on earth at the same time.
No, it is not physically possible for it to rain everywhere on earth at the same time due to the Earth's size and weather patterns. Weather systems are localized and can cover large areas, but not the entire planet simultaneously.
The big dipper is the same size from everywhere on Earth, because everywhere on Earth is the same distance from it.
Because the moon itself is never visible everywhere on Earth at the same time. When there is an eclipse going on, half of the Earth, and all of the people on that half, are turned away from the moon, and looking the other way.
No, when it's winter in America, it's summer on the other side of the earth.
It is at midnight UTC on the International Date Line that the same calendar day is observed everywhere on Earth. At this point, the date changes from one day to the next for the entire planet simultaneously.
I'm sorry, but it is impossible to know how many Saint Bernards are on the earth right now, because no one person can be everywhere on the earth at the same time.
it means to be everywhere at the same time
At the same moment as what, and where on the earth? If you're asking if it can be 6 o'clock everywhere on the Earth at the same time... it could, if we all decided to use, say, Coordinated Universal Time (aka GMT). But currently, the existence of time zones mean that different locations always have different times.
The number is the same everywhere.
For the same reason that the same thing happens everywhere else on Earth . . . sometimes the sun is up, and the rest of the time, the sun is down.
It doesn't.