Yes. There are forms of vapor and ice. It is the only dwarf planet that has any form of water.
Earth is the wettest known planet. It is the only planet known to have liquid water. The only other planet with any form of water is Mars with ice on one of the poles.
In our solar system, Earth is the only planet with any significant amounts of surface water (and land).
Only one of Neptune's moons.
Planet Venus might have water in it. If it does it is in the form of water vapour. If one of you know for sure that water exists or is not present on Venus please improve my answer.
At the moment, the only planet known to have any significant "liquid" water, is the Earth. But it's only the surface that is 70% water. Overall, it's a mere nothing. See the related link for a picture of all the water on Earth.
BECAUSE we are the only planet which has water and atsmophere the moon has no atmoshere,we can not live on the sun to HOT,We can not live on any others because of atmoshere!
There is water but it is only found in the form of ice.
A "Goldilocks planet" is ANY planet that orbits its star at a distance from that star where the heat from the star means that any water present on the planet is in liquid form. This can be determined by measuring the stars temperature (its size and colour) and observing the planets orbital distance.
No. All the planets in the solar system have some quantity of water, though possibly only in trace amounts. Earth is the only planet known to have large quantities of surface water in liquid form.
Any planet could. But from the evidence and observations of the planets that we have right now (late 2013), it appears that Earth may be the only one that does. Mars has water, but as ice not as a liquid. Uranus and Neptune probably have water too, in some form, but only deep inside those planets.
The core of planet Uranus is made up of water.