All of the others were. But each one got its own special name.
mercury
barrn island -active type of volcano-in andaman islands
There are no "planets" between the Earth and its Moon (the closest astronomical body to our planet). Earth has no natural satellites other than the Moon, although some Sun-orbiting asteroids (notably 3753 Cruithne) have orbits that intersect the Earth's orbit and have moon-like resonances with Earth and other inner planets.There are two planets whose orbits are between the Earth and the Sun : Mercury and Venus.
In both systems, the Moon goes around the Earth.
If by "like Earth" you mean habitable (that we could live on, without spacesuits, domes or other technological adaptations): there aren't any in our solar system, and none yet elsewhere that we know of. But scientists keep searching; the universe is a pretty big place, and odds are there are multiple other Earthlike planets out there somewhere.
Actually all planets are named after roman gods and so are many constellations. But the exception to this is earth because in Rome they referred to earth as the mother and she was called Terra.
All of the planets (except Earth) were named for ancient gods. This practice is now enshrined in tradition, and any planets discovered in the future are to be named for gods and demigods. For example, the moon recently discovered around Pluto was named Charon.
Most of our planets are named from greek gods except earth, Saturn and uranus.
Earth is the only planet NOT named after a god.
All planets in our solar system, with the exception of earth.
You have that backwards. The planets were named for the gods.
There are eight planets in our solar system that are officially named: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. There are also other celestial bodies that are sometimes classified as dwarf planets, such as Pluto and Eris.
The earth is a planet, it has no known planets within.
In short - all the major planets save Earth are named for classic gods. Uranus was named for one of the Titans, which most would still include among the classical Greek/Roman gods, though some scholars might classify them separately as the precursors to the gods. The thousands of asteroids are sometimes referred to as 'minor planets'. And, while many are named after classical gods, many more are not.
All of them except Earth and Uranus.
earth and i don't know
No, not all planets in the solar system were named after Roman gods. While most planets are named after Roman gods, the exceptions are Uranus, named after a Greek sky god, and Neptune, named after the Roman god of the sea.