No.
A "Moon year" is almost exactly the same as an Earth year. That's about 365 Earth days. The Earth and Moon orbit the Sun in about 365.25 Earth days. So the answer is: about 365. If you mean how many "Moon days" in one Moon year, that's different. The Moon rotates in about 27.3 Earth days. That's one definition of a "Moon day". In that case the answer is about 365/27.3 days = about 13.37 days.
It isn't. A "day on the Moon" is about 29.5 Earth days; a year is about 365 days.
A year which is 365 days
a moon year is 27.5 days long but its 27.32 days in a lunar day
No but the earth does go around for a year wich is 365 days but the moon only mooves for 28 days
365 1/4 days in a year 365 and a quarter days every year, that's why we have a leap year every fourth year to round it up
There are 365 days in a normal year, with 366 in a leap year.
A year is 365 days (366 days in a Leap Year).
There is 365 days in a year, but in a leap year there are 366 days.
The Moon does not have day and night in the way that we do. Because of the speed of it's rotation around the Earth, and the speed of the Earth's rotation, one side of the moon is in permanent darkness, while the other is in permanent light.
A year. It is about 365 and a quarter days.
it takes 1 year or 365 days