If it rises at all, it will be generally towards the east.
Celestial objects such as the sun appear to rise in the east and set to the west.
The Plane of the Ecliptic
NO
it appears lowest in the sky at dusk
Rise in the East and set in the West.
The earth rotates.
yes
Because not all stars are supposed to be in the sky at night. There are day stars, like the Sun (it's our closest star). Furthermore, the Earth is constantly spinning. This makes the Sun, Moon, and the Stars appear to rise and set each day/night. The Sun itself is spinning around the Milky Way Galaxy's center, as well.
The full moon appears in the western part of the sky at sunset. The full moon will rises over the western horizon as the sun sets.
When the sun sets, you can watch the sky as the stars and moon appear.
Because Venus, along with Mercury, are inner planets it never appears too far from the sun. In fact Venus never strays more than 47 degrees from the sun. That makes it always appear in the western sky after sunset or in the morning sky in the east at dawn, and that's where our crescent moons always appear.
It appears to shine in the sky.