No sun doesn't revolve to any celestial body, but the celestial body revolve around the sun.
There are a number of appropriate words. The most general is "primary", as in "primary object"; the satellite orbits around the primary. This says nothing about what the primary object IS; a sun, a planet, a moon, or an asteroid, any of which can (and often do) have satellites.
A celestial body is any physical body beyond the earth's atmosphere.
The planet Mars is gravitationally bound to the Sun. The Sun is the primary celestial body in our solar system. All the planets in the solar system (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) revolve around the Sun.
Planets, planetesimals, moons, comets, asteroids, and space dust all orbit the Sun and none produce any light.
The moon does not have any legs as it is not a living organism, but rather a celestial body that orbits around the Earth.
no, all the planets revolve AROUND the sun.
There are a number of appropriate words. The most general is "primary", as in "primary object"; the satellite orbits around the primary. This says nothing about what the primary object IS; a sun, a planet, a moon, or an asteroid, any of which can (and often do) have satellites.
Asteroids.
Asteroids.
You're describing an attribute of the asteroids.
because the mercury is the fastest to revolve around the sun than any other
A celestial body is any physical body beyond the earth's atmosphere.
Planets are not considered satellites, but rather celestial bodies that orbit around stars, like our Sun. Satellites are objects that orbit larger celestial bodies, such as planets orbiting around stars or moons orbiting around planets.
Polaris is a star, and it doesn't revolve around any planets. It is possible that other planets revolve around Polaris, but so far I'm not aware that anyone has looked.
Any body that orbits the sun is called a planet. a planet has a specific definition. there are asteroids that orbit the sun but they are not called planets. its mostly things that revolve around the sun and reflect light.
Eris does not revolve around any specific object. It is a dwarf planet in our solar system that orbits the Sun just like other planets.
If the earth did not revolve around the sun, there would not be any seasons. The problem is that if the earth did not revolve around the sun, that is, if it came to a stop in its orbit, the sun's gravity (with just the tiniest help from the earth's) would pull the earth into the sun.