it doesnt.it revolves clockwise.
It revolves anti clock-wise.
Anti-clockwise viewed using the North Pole of Earth as "top"
It depends upon from which side of the ecliptic (the plane of Earth's orbit) you are looking. From one side, it'll appear to revolve anti-clockwise around the Sun; from the other side, clockwise.
The Venus revolves in anti - clockwise.
Who told you so: turning an atom upside down will make an anti-clockwise revolution in to a clockwise and vice verse!
Planetary orbits are eliptical, that is they are shaped as elipses. All planets revolve around the sun anti-clockwise as viewed from Earth's north pole.
No, I just checked and I saw it revolve in the same direction as the clock.
All planets in our Solar System, viewed from above our North Pole, revolve around the Sun in an anti clockwise direction.
Within the nine old planets, 3 of them have retrograde rotation: rotate clockwise (westward). They are Venus, Uranus and Pluto. Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune have direct rotation: rotate anti-clockwise (eastward). All the nine planets revolve around the sun eastward or anti clockwise.
counter-clockwise (or anti-clockwise if you're in the UK)
When observing from high to the north, the earth rotates anti-clockwise (counter-clockwise), or toward the east. That's why the sun rises in the east. The earth's orbit or revolution is also anti-clockwise.
The earth revolves counter-clockwise if observed from the north. as he is right you could also tell on the constellations.