No. North America and South America are the only continents that receive sunlight and daytime.
The Moon's surface that faces Earth is called the near side. This side of the Moon is what we see from Earth and is the side that is always facing towards us due to its synchronous rotation with Earth.
The Moon has no faces. It has one side facing Earth called the near side, and one side that is always facing away called the far side.
When the unlighted side of the moon faces the Earth, it is referred to as the new moon phase. During this time, the moon is positioned between the Earth and the Sun, making it nearly invisible to observers on Earth. This phase marks the beginning of the lunar cycle, as the moon will gradually become more illuminated in the following days.
The side that's visible.
The phase of the moon you see depends on how much of the sunlit side of the moon faces earth.
Just like the earth, the moon has a side that faces the sun (day) and a side that faces away from the sun (night). During a full moon, the side of the moon that faces the earth is lit by the sun and appears in daylight whereas the side of the moon that faces away from the earth is in shadow (night). During a new moon, the opposite is true. The side of the moon that faces the earth is in shadow (night) and the side that faces away from the earth is exposed to the sun (day).
The Moon's surface that faces Earth is called the near side. This side of the Moon is what we see from Earth and is the side that is always facing towards us due to its synchronous rotation with Earth.
The Far Side
That's the "near side".
It always faces away from the earth
The Earth.
When your side of the earth faces the sun
It's watching us!
The Moon has no faces. It has one side facing Earth called the near side, and one side that is always facing away called the far side.
When the unlighted side of the moon faces the Earth, it is referred to as the new moon phase. During this time, the moon is positioned between the Earth and the Sun, making it nearly invisible to observers on Earth. This phase marks the beginning of the lunar cycle, as the moon will gradually become more illuminated in the following days.
Dark side of the moon.
The Moon is tidally locked to Earth; the Moon's "day" and the Moon's month are the same length. So the "near side" of the Moon always faces the Earth, and the "far side" always faces away from Earth.