sometimes they do it depends on the gravitational pull but its very often it happens but this answer is so unlikely to be right so don't take my word for it......please
No. Out in the moon sky, you can't see any rings.
the earth;s companion is the moon no doubt
Mercury's surface looks similar to the moon's surface, with craters, plains, and mountains. Both Mercury and the Moon lack an atmosphere, leading to similar erosion and impact patterns on their surfaces.
No planets are in orbit around the moon
This is like asking "do stars need planets?" The simple answer is that they dont. However for complex life to have a chance to evolve on a planet the planet needs to have a stable axis around which it rotates (spins) and tilts (which gives us our seasons) and not to tilt beyond a cetainnumber of degrees there would be an extreme of temperatures, the earths moon stabilises our axial tilt ensuring that there is little extremes of temperature.
the moon creats earths tides! It also effects the planet by stabilizing the rotation of earth!
In size and mass it is enormous compared to it's parent planet - The Earth.
Planets have a gravitational pull. It is just strong enough for moons to stay in orbit.
Earth's moon is relatively large compared to the moons of other planets in the solar system. It is the fifth-largest moon in the solar system. Compared to the size of Earth, the moon is about 1/6th the diameter of Earth.
The Earth, Moon and other planets stay in their orbits under the force of gravity, following Kepler's laws of planetary motion.
No. Out in the moon sky, you can't see any rings.
That is sometimes what the Moon is called. Seen from Venus the Earth and Moon would be seen as a pair of bright planets up to 0.5 degrees apart at opposition, which is the diameter of the Moon as seen from Earth.
the earths moon helps sustsian the gravity on the earths oceancs keeping them in balance
The Moon orbits Earth, so it does not typically "line up" with planets. However, during certain alignments, the Moon can appear close to planets in the sky from our perspective on Earth, such as lining up with Jupiter or Mars.
the earth;s companion is the moon no doubt
None. The Earth's moon is not a planet and there are no planets "ON" any moon. Many planets in the solar system have several moons.
none, the moon is smaller than all the other planets in our solar system.