The planet Mercury. Mercury rotates once every 88 days AND takes 88 days to orbit once around the sun.
Yes the Earth completes a full orbit once per year.
venus completes an orbit every 224.65 days.
The moon orbits the Earth every 28 days (and change). In most years, the moon completes 13 orbits. It's day is exactly the same as its orbit, because the same side always faces the Earth, so it must complete one full orbit in order to complete one full rotation. So, most Earth years have 13 lunar "days".
Nights can have different lengths, depending on your location on earth and the time of year.In order to answer the question with some precision, let's call a night "12 hours".Then the moon completes 0.0169 of an orbit in one night. (rounded)
Full moon.
No - the moon itself stays the same shape. The phases of the moon change as the earth and moon orbit round the sun. The phases are simply the amount of sunlight reflected in relation to the position of the earth's shadow cast on the moon
365.25 days to orbit the sun.
earth completes a full rotation on its axis and thats why we have day and night because of much direct light earths getting from the sun
Uranus is always, continuously, in the process of orbiting the sun. It's been doing that since it was discovered, and most likely for several millions or billions of years before that. It completes one full orbit roughly every 84 earth years.
fundamental
Once a patent reaches its full term, the inventions claimed in that patent become public domain forever.
It takes Mars to orbit around the sun roughly twenty-four hours and thirdy-seven minutes (24 Hours & 37 Mins) Also it takes Mars about 687 Earth days to have a full year, compared to the Earth's 365 days in a year. XD