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It is not, which is why there isn't a solar eclipse and a lunar eclipse every 28 days. The inclination of the Moon's orbit relative to the Earth's is about 5.1 degrees.

Obviously every 14 days the Moon crosses the ecliptic (that is the plane of the Earth's orbit) and when that happens the Moon is at one of its 'nodes'. If new or full moon happens when the moon is exactly at a node, you get a solar or lunar eclipse.

The inclination explains why sometimes the moon appears to be higher or lower in the sky than the Sun ever gets.

Just to make it more tricky, the Moon's nodes rotate slowly round its orbit, getting once round in every 19 years, which is called the Metonic Cycle.

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