The gravitational attraction of the sun causes the earth to revolve around the sun once a year.
Obviously
Earth revolves around the Sun once per year.
About 365 days, or one year.
The Earth revolves around the sun exactly once per year (that is actually the definition of a year).
The Earth revolves around the Sun once every 365 1/4 days ... once per year.
The name we use for Earth orbiting the Sun once time is, "Year". It takes one year for the Earth to revolve once around the Sun.
The earth has arranged to revolve around the sun once a year and rotate on its axis once a day.
No it takes one full year for the Earth to revolve around the sun.
The Sun does not circle Earth. Earth circles around the Sun. It takes one year for Earth to revolve once around the Sun.
A year is defined as the time it takes an object to revolve once around the Sun
Normally when we talk about a "year", we refer to the "Solar Year" [See Link] which is the period that the Earth takes to revolve around the Sun once. However, there is another kind of year and that is a Galactic year [See Link] which is the time it takes the Sun (and all the planets) to revolve once around the galactic centre of the Milky Way Galaxy (Our Galaxy), so really, the Sun does have something to revolve around. The Galactic year takes around 225,000,000 Earth years
The moon and Earth are essentially a single system that orbits the sun once a year.