Asteroids orbit the sun. Moons orbit planets and planets orbit the sun. So you could say the moons orbit the sun. However, moons are kept in their orbits by the gravity of their planet and planets are kept in orbit by the gravity of the sun. So in that sense, moons do not orbit the sun.
Moons orbit around its planet while the planets orbit the Sun, therefore moons circle the Sun.
Mercury. It is the closest planet to the sun and so orbits at the fastest speed and in the shortest time, just 88 days. Venus also has no moons and orbits very quickly, since it is only the second planet out. Not as quickly as mercury though.
Moons orbit around planets. They are natural satellites that are held in orbit by the planet's gravitational pull.
The Sun has no moons. Moons orbit Planets > Planets orbit the Sun.
A moon by definition has to orbit a planet - and the Sun is a star, not a planet. Also it has no rings.
The planet you are describing is Mercury. It is the closest planet to the Sun, characterized by its small size, heavily cratered surface, and extreme temperatures. Mercury has no natural moons and completes its orbit around the Sun in just about 88 Earth days, making it the fastest orbiting planet in our solar system.
No, planets orbit around the sun. There are over 60 moons that orbit around Jupiter though.
Planets are in direct orbit around the sun, while moons are in orbit around the planets.
No. If an object orbits the sun it is not considered a moon. Depending on its size, composition, and location it may be considered a planet, dwarf planet, asteroid, or comet.
That would be Mercury. Venus also has no moons, but does not move as fast as Mercury.
There is only one legit sun and that sun orbits the center of the milky way whereas the moons orbit their planet.