Most people accept the answer as "the full moon".
You see the entire face of the moon with no blacked out parts.
You see about 50% of the moon because we are only really seeing half of it because it is a sphere.
As the moon travels around the Earth, different parts of it are lighted by the sun. We see various parts of the face that are being lit by the sun. Since the sun and shadow move around the moon, we see different parts of the moon face, or phases of the moon.
Based on how the craters are places and the angle at which you are looking at the moon, it seems to show the "man on the moon" face.
Everyone on earth sees the same face of the moon.
The moon does not rotate so on Earth we always see the same side no matter where the observer is.
That would be a full moon.
It depends which point of view you are looking at it from. What they see is partially influenced by what other people see. Everyone sees the same side of the moon. In most of Europe and US, they see a face. In other parts of the world it is a rabbit.
The moon itself doesn't change shape. What you see is the moon's daylight and night time periods moving across its face.
because your ugly face made it
You will see most of the moon's surface during the full moon phase when the entire illuminated side of the moon is facing Earth.
At the Full Moon, the Moon is on the side of Earth that is opposite from the Sun (i.e. behind the Earth as viewed from the Sun), so that the face of the Moon that we see is the half that is illuminated by the Sun.At any other time, we see "phases" of the Moon, because the Sun is illuminating part of the "far side", the face of the Moon that is never seen from Earth.