it depends where on the earth you are standing
the moon isnt in the sky its in space
Since Earth's surface is rotating toward the east, "fixed" celestial bodies appear to be moving toward the west.
No, it does not.
because the Earth is rotating and the Moon is orbiting the Earth by gravity
east to west
Each night at the same time the moon is further east because that is the direction that the moon orbits the earth. It gets round in about a month.
east 2 west
The Moon travels across the sky in the same direction as the Sun; Its' leading edge is the point at which phase changes start and move from right to left.
Transverse waves will move across the direction of travel.
The moon goes in the direction of its orbit
Just like the Sun and the Moon, stars appear to move towards the west. The reason is that Earth rotates in the opposite direction - towards the east.
The Moon is so far away that if you move a few meters, or even kilometers, the direction of the Moon won't change appreciably.The Moon is so far away that if you move a few meters, or even kilometers, the direction of the Moon won't change appreciably.The Moon is so far away that if you move a few meters, or even kilometers, the direction of the Moon won't change appreciably.The Moon is so far away that if you move a few meters, or even kilometers, the direction of the Moon won't change appreciably.
Regulus stars appear to move across the sky from East to West (:
the moon isnt in the sky its in space
umm... the sun does't move but the earth orbits the sun once a year and it rotates on its axis once every 24 hours this causes night and day. The moon orbits the earth i think :)
Since Earth's surface is rotating toward the east, "fixed" celestial bodies appear to be moving toward the west.
No, it does not.