no
the earth spins on it's axis while rotating around the sun
The rotation of the planet on its axis of spin. The spin is responsible for the day and the night.
Yes, "orbit" and "revolve around" mean the same thing. Not "rotate" though; that means "spin". The easy way to remember: Earth ROTATES on its axis (spins around) but REVOLVES around the Sun (while its rotating, of course.)
The word revolve (to go around, as in circles) can mean to turn, spin, or rotate. (*For planets, "revolve" is used to mean orbiting around a larger body, while "rotate" is used for the spin of the body itself.)
No
the second... it rotates with the earth, like the rest of the atmospere
Yes, the Earth does rotate on its axis.
When looking from the north of earth it seems to rotate counter-clockwise.
we wood die!!
Yes. When we're talking about the Earth, 'spin' and 'rotate' are the same thing.
Venus and Mercury rotate slowly, much more slowly than Earth or Mars.
you have to hold control and then just move your mouse around and it will spin
The vast majority of tornadoes in the northern hemisphere spin counterclockwise. Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
Climb
Another word for spin is turn or rotate.
rotate means to spin on its axis and it measures 24hours to spin which is one day(If you happen to be talking about the Earth's rotation.)(Otherwise, it's 27.3 days for the Moon, 26 to 31 days for the sun, 22 hours for Mars, etc.)
spin is the symmetry of something, if it has a spin of 1, then you need to rotate the thing 1 full circle for it to look the same as when you didn't rotate it. if it has a spin of 1/2, then you need to rotate it 1/2 of a circle. it is actually possible for something to have a spin of 2 (2 full circles) or higher.
All stars rotate (spin). Some spin faster than others, but all stars will rotate as without this rotation, the star will literally fall into space.