Horse Isle Answer - 27.3
The Moon orbits the earth nearly once a month. It orbits every 28 days. In a year, the Moon can orbit the earth 13 times.
The Moon orbit the the earth every 29.5 days.
The Moon orbits Earth just once in 27.3 days.
27.32 days
27.32 days. During that time, the Earth moves about 1/13th of the way around its orbit, and it takes the Moon another 2+ days to "catch up" to be in the same relative alignment of Earth-Moon-Sun. So the Moon orbits the Earth in 27.32 days, but the time between full moons is 29.5 days.
The moon completes approximately 13 orbits around the Earth in a year. This means that it orbits the Earth about every 27.3 days.
No, it orbits the earth once every 27.5 days or so.
The Moon actually orbits the Earth, which it does in 28 days, but if you consider the Earth and the Moon as a double system, then the Moon orbits the Sun once a year, just as the Earth does. The Moon is much closer to the Earth than the Earth and the Moon are to the Sun.
The Moon orbits the Earth once approximately every 27.3 days, a period known as a sidereal month. However, due to the Earth's own orbit around the Sun, the time it takes for the Moon to go from one full moon to the next (a synodic month) is about 29.5 days. This difference is due to the relative motion of the Earth and the Moon in their respective orbits.
Well, if you mean the object that orbits the earth, it's the moon,
There are a few ways of answering that question. The moon orbits the earth every 27.32 days. The earth orbits the sun every 365 days, so the effective length of a lunar month from an earth viewer's perspective is 29.53 days.
The moon orbits the earth once every day (approximately), plus a few minutes.