The longer you watch it, the more times you would see.
Over a substantial period of time, the moon orbits the sun exactly as often
as the Earth does ... once every 365.25 days (once a year).
about once. The moon rotates roughly once in that period, as it completes one orbit about the Earth. This keeps the same side facing the Earth at all times.
When a moon's orbit is backwards, it is referred to as a retrograde orbit.
Phobos doesn't orbit the moon. It orbits Mars.
The moon is in constant orbit around the earth, all the time.
As seen by an observer on the Earth, the Moon's apparent orbit is distinctly elliptical. The orbit is subject to many perturbations and variations because of the Earth's elliptical motion around the Sun, and the fluid tidal envelope sloshing around the Earth. The eccentricity of the Moon's orbit varies between 0.026 and 0.077 .
the moon
Only once.
27.3 days (a sidereal month)
Apollo 11 orbited the moon 10 times before landing.
The moon orbits the Earth approximately 13 times in a year.
Once, it is in a synchronous orbit with Earth
The Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited around the moon 10 times.
Once a year since it's in our orbit.
The Moon does not orbit the Sun. It orbits the Earth.
Once. This is called tidal locking, and it is why we always see the same side of the Moon from Earth.
The radius of the Moon's orbit is about 60 times larger than the radius of Earth.
It takes 27.3 days for the moon to orbit the Earth