The sun and the moon are part of the milky way making this an impossible question to answer.
the sun the moon and the stars that make up the milkyway
As the Earth, the Sun and the Moon are within and part of the Milky Way then no. However, if you are referring to the "Celestial Disc" they yes - that part of it - is.
When the sun and the moon are exactly in line but the sun is partially concealed by the moon that is called a Lunar eclipse.
When the Earth, Sun and Moon are in line an eclipse can occur.
An eclipse of the Sun, if they are in that order. Moon, Earth and Sun would be an eclipse of the Moon..
the sun the moon and the stars that make up the milkyway
a lunareclipse is when the sun and the moon line up in a straight line.
The Milky Way and the Sun aren't "planets", so I suppose it would be Earth by default.
As the Earth, the Sun and the Moon are within and part of the Milky Way then no. However, if you are referring to the "Celestial Disc" they yes - that part of it - is.
When the sun and the moon are exactly in line but the sun is partially concealed by the moon that is called a Lunar eclipse.
When the Earth, Sun and Moon are in line an eclipse can occur.
The moon orbits the earth and together the earth and the moon orbits the sun. Together the solar system orbits the center of the milkyway (where it is thought to be a black hole).
The milkyway.
An eclipse of the Sun, if they are in that order. Moon, Earth and Sun would be an eclipse of the Moon..
during a lunar eclipse, earth, sun and moon are in a straight line, First it's the sun, then earth, and last the moon.
In a line. Sun, Moon, Earth or Sun, Earth, Moon
When the moon is either 180 degrees from the sun, or aligned with it. That is, if you could draw a straight line from the sun to the earth and out into space beyond, if the moon lands anywhere on that line, you have spring tides. In that alignment, you'll have either a new moon or a full moon.