The word orbit can be either a noun, in which case it means the path taken by one object (such as a planet) as it circles around another object (such as the sun) or it can be a verb, meaning to follow such a path.
"The teacher has plotted the orbit of the moon" is an example of a sentence with the word orbit.
The word orbiting is a verb. It is the present participle of orbit.
The word "orbit" has two syllables: or-bit.
revolution
Yes, the word 'orbit' is both a noun (orbit, orbits) and a verb (orbit, orbits, orbiting, orbited).Examples:How many miles is the Earth's orbit around the Sun? (noun)The Earth travels 584 million miles to orbit the Sun. (verb)
I assume you mean "around the Sun". That is the Earth's orbit. The plane of this orbit is called the ecliptic.
"The teacher has plotted the orbit of the moon" is an example of a sentence with the word orbit.
The word orbit has two syllables. (Or-bit)
circuitous path orbit
two synonyms for the word orbit are encircle and revolve
The word orbiting is a verb. It is the present participle of orbit.
Revolve
Orbit has two syllables.
orbit
all of our planets orbit the sun
The word "orbit" has two syllables: or-bit.
Not by any reasonable definition of the word "orbit", no.