after it rotates once a day has passed, after it revolves the sun once a year has passed
The Earth rotates on its axis once a day and revolves around the Sun once a year.
the answer is false.
Every point on Earth rotates from west to east. If you hang suspended over the north pole looking down at it, you see the Earth rotating counterclockwise (from right to left). If you hang suspended over the south pole looking down at it, you see the Earth rotating clockwise (from left to right).
The angular momemtum of pretty much the whole solar system is in that direction. All the planets revolve that way, the sun rotates that way, and almost all of the planets rotate that way. Venus is the odd exception, and it rotates backward, but very slowly. The primordial stuff that eventually coalesced into the solar system was on average moving that way when it started, so that's the way it rotates still.
The Earth orbits around the Sun is the simple answer, which is good enough for most people. However, a more accurate answer is that they both orbit the center of mass of the solar system. Because the Sun has nearly 99.9 percent of the mass of the solar system, the Earth orbits a point that's normally just outside the Sun's surface. So, the simple answer is fairly accurate.
the earth rotates
No, the Earth rotates once in a day.
No. The earth rotates once in about 24 hours. The sun rotates once in about 32 days.
Earth rotates once in about 23 hours and 56 minutes.
Earth rotates on its axis once in about 24 hours. Earth revolves in its orbit around the Sun once every year.
month..!
The Earth rotates once per day.
Venus rotates once every 243 Earth days and thus is the slowest.
The Earth rotates on its axis once a day and revolves around the Sun once a year.
Earth rotates on its axis!!!
Venus
Yes. The planet Jupiter rotates once in about 11 hours.