Venus usually. Although sometimes it is out shined by other things like meteors.
Jupiter is the second brightest planet in the sky after Venus and the fourth brightest object in the sky. The sun and the moon are the brightest objects in the sky, but they are not planets.
The Moon is illuminated by the Sun. At full moon, we see the bright part - the illuminated part. At new moon, we see mostly the dark part. (This part is also slightly visible, due to light reflected from the Earth.)
Blue-white stars are the hottest and brightest stars; Sirius A (and its white dwarf companion Sirius B) is the brightest star in Earth's night sky.
The strip of the sky through which the sun, moon, and brightest planets appear to move in the course of a year is known as the ecliptic.
No, Jupiter is typically the 4th brightest object in the sky after the Sun, Moon, and Venus. It can vary in brightness depending on its position in its orbit and its alignment with Earth.
Venus
The sun and the moon are not planets. The sun is a star and the moon is a natural satellite. The brightest planet in Earth's sky is Venus.
brightest
After the Sun, yes.
No, the Sun is the brightest thing is the sky. The light from the mood is in fact reflected sunlight.
The next brightest body in the sky, after the sun and the moon, is the planet Venus. The brightest star is the one called "Sirius", in the constellation "Canis Major".
venus
No. The Sun is
Venus is the brightest thing in the sky, after the Sun and Moon.
Generally the brightest objects seen in the sky are the moon, some planets, (notably Venus and Jupiter) and stars, Sirius being the brightest.
Assuming you mean in the Earth's night sky, Venus is the next brightest natural object seen from Earth.
The planet Venus is!