I suppose it would depend on which side of the planet you are on. If it's clockwise on one side then it's counterclockwise on the opposite side.
If it blows air, clockwise. If it is pulling air, it is counter clockwise
If you are standing on the north pole, it is rotating counterclockwise.
cloclwise
Clockwise
All hurricanes and most tornadoes rotate counterclockwise.
The gyres rotate counter clockwise in the southern hemisphere, and clockwise in the northern hemisphere.
A typhoon in the northern hemisphere rotates counter-clockwise, in contrast to a typhoon in the southern hemisphere which rotates the other way (i.e., clockwise) as explained by the Coriolis effect.
All planets in our solar system except for Venus and Uranus rotate counter-clockwise as viewed from above the North Pole. Another way to say this, is that Saturn moves from west to east. This is also the same direction in which every planet orbits the sun.
counter clockwise
The rotation is clockwise. Answer. If unsure, look at your fan blades, to see which way they rotate!
You rotate in a clockwise fashion
Tornadoes in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise.
Probably because an asteroid knocked them into spinning that way.
All hurricanes and most tornadoes rotate counterclockwise.
Winds in a tropical depression rotate counterclockwise if it is in the northern hemisphere and clockwise if it is in the southern hemisphere.
The gyres rotate counter clockwise in the southern hemisphere, and clockwise in the northern hemisphere.
As with all low pressure systems the winds of a tropical depression rotate counterclockwise if it is in the northern hemisphere and clockwise if it is in the southern.
A typhoon in the northern hemisphere rotates counter-clockwise, in contrast to a typhoon in the southern hemisphere which rotates the other way (i.e., clockwise) as explained by the Coriolis effect.
All planets in our solar system except for Venus and Uranus rotate counter-clockwise as viewed from above the North Pole. Another way to say this, is that Saturn moves from west to east. This is also the same direction in which every planet orbits the sun.
Most of them spin counterclockwise
counter clockwise counter clockwise