The sky that we look up to is the universe itself. You see stars, you see the sun, the moon, some near planets. Asking "is the sky bigger than the galaxy?" makes no sense as a question. You can even see the Milky Way galaxy in the sky on a clear night sometimes. I would say the sky is the galaxy, in a way... The sky is space. We see beyond Earth when we look up to it at night.
However our field of view is definitely smaller than a galaxy, we can't see all around the outside of Earth from a single position. In this sense, a galaxy is bigger than the sky. But as I said, the question itself doesn't really make much sense.
Yes, much bigger. There are many stars in our galaxy, thousands of millions of them. Everything you see in the night sky is in our galaxy, including the Moon, so the galaxy is much bigger.
Our Universe is bigger, than a galaxy.
A Galaxy is far bigger than a nebula.
The duration of Bigger Than the Sky is 1.77 hours.
God is wayyyyyy, bigger than the sky and don't you forget it!
Bigger Than the Sky was created on 2005-02-18.
No!
No.
A galaxy cluster consists of several galaxy groups, each of which in turn contains several galaxies. So no; a galaxy cluster is MUCH bigger than any individual galaxy.
No. The Milky Way is our Galaxy.
A dwarf galaxy by virtue of it's name will be smaller than a "normal" galaxy.
Nope! It's smaller than the S3.