All planets orbit the sun counter-clockwise, when viewing from above the north pole of the sun.
There is no planet where time goes backwards in a literal sense. This concept is often explored in science fiction but does not exist in reality according to our current understanding of physics.
Neptune
An object that moves around a planet is called a satellite. Satellites can be natural, like moons, or artificial, like those used for communication or scientific research.
It means that it moves around the planet, along a path (orbit) that has the shape of an ellipse.
There is no such planet. They all move counterclockwise (when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual definition).
because a planet turns left as it moves, when you see both at the beginning, your eyes expect for both to move different, so it looks like its going backwards
The celestial object that appears to move backwards among the stars is a planet in retrograde motion. This happens when a faster-moving planet "laps" a slower-moving outer planet from the viewpoint of Earth, causing it to look like it is moving backwards relative to the fixed stars in the sky.
the gluteals
ur dum
"Backwards" is an adverb, not a common noun. It is used to describe the direction in which something moves or faces.
Time can never go backwards. You may be thinking of a planet which rotates in the opposite direction to Earth. Venus and Uranus do this.
A swing!
no bird can only move backwards! only a hummingbird has the ability to move backwards but it also moves forwards and left to right!
A planet is a large object that moves around a star in a solar system.
it is Venus.
I think venus
There is no planet where time goes backwards in a literal sense. This concept is often explored in science fiction but does not exist in reality according to our current understanding of physics.