Six of the eight major planets rotate "anticlockwise" (counterclockwise) as seen from above the Earth's north pole: Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune.
The rotation of Venus is slowly clockwise, while the spin of Uranus is now observed to be clockwise because it has been tipped over more than 90 degrees "onto its side" (as if rolling along its orbital path at times).
Venus rotates in a CLOCKWISE direction, as usually defined. Uranus is also
considered to do this, but with an extreme axial tilt.
ALL the other planets rotate anticlockwise.
So, the answer is Venus, probably, if the question was "wrong".
Most planets in our solar system rotate (spin) anticlockwise - the same direction as they orbit, as seen from above the north pole looking down. The notable exceptions are Venus, which spins clockwise, or the opposite direction to most ("retrograde") and Uranus, which spins on its side (about 98 degrees to the orbital plane).
Planets which turn anti clockwise are Earth, Jupiter, Mercury, Saturn, Neptune and Mars.
Which planet moves clockwise round the sun
There is no such planet. They all move counterclockwise (when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual definition).
The planets all revolve round the Sun in an anticlockwise direction as seen from a point to the north of the solar system. Planets always move from west to east in the sky relative to the stars, apart from when they are in retrograde motion.
Neptune
A path the shape of a circal
The speed at which the planet moves and its distance from the sun both impact how long it takes to go around the sun. The bigger the orbit , the longer the planet's year.
There is no such planet. They all move counterclockwise (when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual definition).
A planet's orbital speed changes, depending on how far it is from the Sun. The closer a planet is to the Sun, the stronger the Sun's gravitational pull on it, and the faster the planet moves. The farther it is from the Sun, the weaker the Sun's gravitational pull, and the slower it moves in its orbit.
The Sun doesn't move fast, but if you mean which planet moves fast around the sun then it would be Mercury, because it is closer.
it moves around the sun
The Earth moves around the sun.
Because the sun moves around so when the sun moves around the light from the sun touches the planets
That planet will move faster in its orbit.
Sedna.
A planet orbits a sun, a moon orbits a planet
haha
summer
All of them