The earth is spinning all the time.
It completes one entire revolution ... i.e. a stick in the ground returns to point in the same direction in which it began ...
in about 23 hours 56 minutes = about 86,160 seconds.
24 hours 37 minutes and 23 seconds
24 hours = 1day for it to spin around once on its axis
the time it takes the earth to spin around on its axis
No. Each of those "days" of which the question speaks is the length of time it takes for the earth to spin on its axis. The question is actually referring to the moon, which takes 27.32 days to spin once on its axis.
this is a dum question
The Earth spins on its axis all the time. It never stops.
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.
It actually takes 23 hours 56 minutes (and a few seconds) for the Earth to spin exactly one time on its axis. We say that the day is 24 hours exactly because the Earth has continued to travel in its orbit, and it takes the extra 4 minutes for the Earth to spin enough more for the Sun to be in the same apparent position in the sky.
The Earth spins on an axis.
The earth spins one complete spin every 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 seconds (rounded)
Yes, the Earth does rotate on its axis.
23hours 56minutes 4seconds (seconds are rounded)