Actually, no. Due to the gravitational pull of certain beings in different parts of the world and due to the ovular shape of the moon, different places actually see different views of the moon.
No, it does not
yes, the moon phases change every day. as long as the moon keeps orbiting earth, that will happen.
The moon rotates on its axis once every 27.3 days, which is also the same amount of time it takes for the moon to orbit the Earth. This synchronous rotation means we always see the same side of the moon from Earth.
There is a full moon every month of the year - on rare occasion, two full moons in the same month.
A full moon occurs approximately every 29.5 days, which means it rarely falls on the same date each year. However, it can happen that a full moon occurs on the same date in consecutive years, but this is uncommon due to the lunar cycle's variance. In practice, a full moon on the same date can happen roughly every 19 years, following the Metonic cycle, where the lunar phases align with the solar calendar.
every moon looks like ice cream
No.
No
no
The moon is always a sphere but the moon does not look the same every week when observed from Earth. This is because we see sunlight hitting the moon at different angles as it orbits our planet.
The Moon is tidally locked with the Earth, meaning it rotates about its axis at the same rate as it revolves around the Earth. For this reason, the same side of the Moon always faces Earth and the Moon slips away about one inch every year.
No, because every three of four days, the moon's phases changes and sometimes you cannot see the moon every four weeks the same time.
The moon is visible for the same reason every object is visible: it reflects light.
yes
No, it does not
The moon rotates in the same direction as its orbit. The rate of rotation is such that the same face is always pointing at the earth.
Because the moon takes the same time to rotate once on its axis - as it does to go around the earth. Therefore we see the same side of the moon every time.