poor little Pluto
Technically, yes. But, just a few years ago, scientists discovered a red, round, sphere-shaped hunk of rock that scientists believe may be a ninth planet(well, tenth planet if you count Pluto). It is still unclear if it really is another planet or not.
If you count Pluto as a planet its Pluto :D
Mercury is the smallest planet unless you count Pluto
we can't count.
This depends on whether you count Pluto as a planet or not. If you don't, then Neptune has the longest orbit period (nearly 165 Earth years). If you do, then Pluto has a orbit period of 248.1 years. If you count Pluto, you might also count Sedna which takes 12,050 years. Sedna is 2/3 the size of Pluto and it's 960 times as far from the Sun as the Earth.
When counting the planets in our solar system, Earth is not typically included in the count because we are observing from Earth itself, so it is considered the point of reference. Therefore, when counting the planets, we usually start with Mercury as the first planet and exclude Earth from the count.
Count olaf threatens to kill sunny in a cage dangling off a tower
Saturday = Saturn as Sunday = Sun does not count as it is a star Monday = Moon does not count as it is a moon
No. The moon is a satellite and the sun is a star.
Too small to be count as a planet.
If you count Pluto, the answer is PLUTO.
There are huge tortoises that weigh 500 pounds. A giant crocodile might weigh more than that. you could count extinct species (people argue over whether some dinosaurs were warm-blooded or cold blooded)