from the inside to outside, dwarf planets included.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Ceris(DP), Jupiter,Saturn,Uranus,Neptune,Pluto-charon(DPB?), Haumea(DP), MakeMake(DP), and Eris(DP)
DP stands for dwarf planet, DPB stands for dwarf planet Binary.
Starting with the sun, here are the planets in order: Sun (or Sol), Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and X. Where's Pluto? It is now a dwarf planet. There is several planets newly discovered days ago (as of 01/13/10), about 3. A way to remember them is:
My Mercury
Very Venus
Excellent Earth
Mother Mars
Just Jupiter
Served Saturn
Us Uranus
Nachos. Neptune
These names are Roman after the Roman gods, not Greek.
Latin names are quite good and Scottish Gaelic names are really nice as well.
The other names for Mars include the Red Planet and Ares, the ancient Greek name for the god of war, which is equivalent to the Roman god Mars.
Rigel is a star, not a planet. It is not certain who actually named it. Many cultures have other names for it.
Mars fits into all three categories of being an inner planet, a terrestrial planet, and a small planet in our solar system.
The moon is not classified as a planet at all. It is a natural satellite of Earth.
the goddesses
Satellite's, anything that circles a planet.
cheese wiz
they are all in the same solar system
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto(its really not a planet but Pluto is a dwarf planet)
mariner 10 and MESSENGER
planet
This planet has many names, in various languages. Most of them translate as "Dirt". Earth; Terra; Tellus. All different words for "soil" or "dirt".
they are by that they have different names and planet earth is the only one that has air that humans (people) can breath
Latin names are quite good and Scottish Gaelic names are really nice as well.
It is an imaginary planet with imaginary moons. It does not exist
There is only one name of Mars in English: Mars. There are various phrases that can be used to refer to Mars (for example, "the red planet" or "Sol IV"), but it's difficult to think of nine specifically. If all languages are included, there are far more than nine names for Mars. In short: we have no idea what you're talking about when you say "the nine names of the planet Mars."