The sun does not go up in the sky. The Earth is turning on an axis making the sun seem to go up.
There's no sun at night. Go outside at midnight and look up.
We're in it's sky, not the sun in ours. And we're in orbit around it.
There is no oral reason why the sun is called the sun. So basically the gods looked up in the sky and said sun. That's how the sun got its name.
The moon appears to "go down" when the sun comes up because its position in the sky is influenced by the rotation of the Earth. The moon orbits the Earth just like the Earth orbits the sun, so as Earth rotates, it seems like the moon moves across the sky. When the sun rises, the moon's position in the sky is lower as it follows its own orbit.
Birds go up in the sky and have wings
The sun does not go up and down. The earth rotates.
Nowhere, it continues on its orbit. It is perfectly possible to see the moon in the sky while the sun is still up just before and just after the full moon.
The sun continues to move across the sky, during the daylight hours, as the earth turns, no matter if the sky is clear or cloudy.
I'm not sure what you mean. The sun is the giant ball of fire in the sky. There ya go.
It's the same as the sky is brighter when the Sun is up, only not as much.
It is always in the sky but when it is dark on one side of the earth, the sun is up on the other side. So yes, the sun is always up.
The sun appears to go down because the Earth rotates, creating the cycle of day and night. The moon appears to go up as it follows its own orbit around the Earth, causing it to rise in the sky at different times depending on its position relative to the sun.