if you're on the north pole
then the answer is the same
sometimes the sun appears, in the morning, out of the northeast or southeast depending on the time of year, and can appear across the latitudes as one moves from south north and vice versa.
The sun rises from north east in the summer and south east in the winter in the Northern hemisphere due to the tilt of the Earth's axis.
Depends which way your facing. North is east, east is south, south is west, and west is north.
"East of the Sun" does not make sense. The directions North, South, East and West are relative to the Earth's prime meridian and equator, or to a specific spot on the Earth, not relative to a position with respect to the Sun. Please restate the question.
east is where the sun sorge, west is where the sun fall, north is the opposite of east and south is the opposite of west.
It is just sometimes convenient to talk of the Northern hemisphere etc.
north and south
If you are facing north on the Earth east is directly to the right exept exactly on the north or south pole where there is no east but only north or south.
The sun rises from north east in the summer and south east in the winter in the Northern hemisphere due to the tilt of the Earth's axis.
The southernmost point on Earth is the south pole. The northernmost point on Earth is the north pole. There is no east or west pole.
you use by nowing which element like north,north east,north west, east, west, south, south east, south west
Going clockwise, the 16 directions are... North North North East North East East North East East East South East South East South South East South South South West South West West South West West West North West North West North North West ...and back to North again.
It is the northern most point on Earth. You cannot go west or east of it, so the only direction is south. At the South Pole, you can only go north. The Earth rotates based on the North Pole and South Pole. There is no east or west pole.
North, East, South, West.
The Equator is the imaginary line halfway between the North and South Poles and is at zero degrees latitude. It divides the Earth into North and South Hemispheres. The Sun appears directly above the Equator at the Autumn and Spring equinox.
Well, let's see. Starting at North and proceeding clockwise from there,you've got your-- north by east-- north-northeast-- northeast by north-- northeast-- northeast by east-- east-northeast-- east by north-- EAST-- east by south-- east-southeast-- southeast by east-- southeast-- southeast by south-- south-southeast-- south by east-- SOUTH-- south by west-- south-southwest-- southwest by south-- southwest-- southwest by west-- west-southwest-- west by south-- WEST-- west by north-- west-northwest-- northwest by west-- northwest-- northwest by north-- north-northwest, and-- north by west
As many as you like, but usually north & south OR east & west.
It depends on where are you standing, over the North pole, or over (or should I say under) the South pole. If you are at the north pole, the Earth appears to spin counter clockwise and at the south pole, clockwise. If you view the Earth from space, with the north pole up and the south pole down, it will spin moving left to right at the equator.