a planet
a) Earth is not a star, but a planet. b) Earth is not part of "another galaxy", but of our own galaxy.
moonThe Moon (moon), then Venus (planet), Ceres (dwarf planet) Proximus Centauri (Star), Andromeda (galaxy)
Neither -- the Moon is technically a satellite. It is in orbit around a planet. That planet orbits around a star. That star is one of billions of other stars which form a galaxy.
The moon that revolves around the earth is not a star, it is part of the earth that was thrown off into space when the earth was hit by a large asteroid early in its development, about 30 million years after the earth first was formed. The closest star to the Earth is our Sun, it is a star and it is called Sol.
Starting from least to greatest magnitude in size: Earth Sun Solar System Milky Way Galaxy Universe
Although rogue planet might escape a solar system or galaxy, its moon may remain since the moon is held in orbit by the planet, rather than a parent star. The moon will tend to go where the planet goes.
The Earth is the third planet from its primary star, Sol, hence it is in the Solar System; alternately, Sol is one star of billions in the Milky Way galaxy.
No. Earth is a planet. It orbits the sun, which is a star.
earths moon
* Galaxy * Nebula * Star * Planet * Moon However, some moons are larger than planets, and some planets and moons are larger than some stars. A constellation is an imaginary pattern of stars, so one cannot speak of its actual size.
Earth is a Planet. Moon is a satalite. Sun is a meduim sized star.
planet and terre could work (mean's: earth) but it's calling all dogs great danes, which they're not. stick with planet.