spin; turn around an imaginary axis of rotation, like the one that includes Earth's geographical north and south poles
Venus
All of them. A few satellites are tidally locked to their primary (luna for example), but all the planets rotate.
Every planet except Venus and Uranus in our solar system rotates counterclockwise as viewed from above the North Pole of the planet. Venus has a slow clockwise rotation and Uranus rotates on its side.
An axis is an imaginary line perpendicular to the plane of rotation and centered on the center of mass of the (solar) system.
Yes, all of them do, though at different speeds.
none
The electrons typically rotate around the nucleus in the solar system model.
Yes, all the planets in our solar system revolve and rotate.
the sun
Yes, they all do.
The Sun DOES rotate. See related question.
All planets in the solar system rotate, but not all in the same direction, Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune all rotate in one direction, while Venus, Uranus, and the dwarf planet Pluto rotate in the opposite direction.
Venus
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
The solar system is in outer space. There are 8 planets in the solar system. They all rotate the sun. The body organ system is a completely different thing. Figure it out.
All of the planets in the solar system rotate, but two are very slow. They are Mercury and Venus.
Orbit the sun and rotate on their axis.