Inertia; the laws of motion and gravity (if you are talking Newtonian classical mechanics) the deformation of space due to mass (if you adhere to Einstein's interpretation)
Earth itself moves around the Sun.
Pluto moves around the Sun, not the earth
No. Earth moves in an ellipse around the Sun; when it is closest to the Sun (at its periapsis, in January), it moves faster, and when it is furthest from the Sun (at its apapsis), it moves slower.
The air moves around the earth as a result of pressure difference.
The moon is called a satellite of earth because it revolves around the earth
Earth itself moves around the Sun.
What moves water is the air
Earth itself moves around the Sun.
The object that the Earth moves around is located at the center of our solar system, known as the Sun. This gravitational interaction between the Earth and the Sun is what keeps the Earth in its orbit around the Sun.
No water is ever lost. It simply moves from one place to another.
Pluto moves around the Sun, not the earth
Here is one: You can observe that the position of the Sun amongst the stars changes. So either the entire sky with all the stars moves around us, the Sun moves around the Earth, or the Earth moves around the Sun. Assuming that it is Earth that moves around the Sun is the simplest of the assumptions (in the older, geocentric, model, the other planets had complicated orbits around the Earth).
a year...
earth
The first man to discover that the earth moves around the sun was an Italian scientist named Galileo Galilei.
this path is called its orbit :)
No. Earth moves in an ellipse around the Sun; when it is closest to the Sun (at its periapsis, in January), it moves faster, and when it is furthest from the Sun (at its apapsis), it moves slower.