ANSWERS: 10
  • Mars, Jupiter, Earth, Venus, Neptune, Mercury, Uranus, and Saturn!!! Woo Hoo. All 8. And I'm including Pluto. Still a planet to me!
  • Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Pluto (now a dwarf planet). No I didn't forget Uranus. Extra solar planets most are named 'B'. Sadly no one is taking the time to assign names to our new found friends. Instead we are being very borgish (New word, I claim it, and now copyright it here - LOL)and assigning extrasolar planets designations, usually a letter after the name of the star - and in some amount of horror we find that many of those stars only have a catalog number! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stars_with_confirmed_extrasolar_planets give a list of extra solar planets. Dwarf planets (Plutoids): (In Sol system (our solar system): Ceres Located in the asteroid belt, was until recently considered an asteroid, it has gotten a class rating of Dwarf Planet (I assume for meritorious good works.) Pluto Our old friend who was demoted (I guess dishonorably discharged from planet status) is now a Plutoid. Objects beyond the orbit of Neptune that are dwarf planet size are getting this classification), thus further out we have: Haumea Makemake Eris (AKA Xena) There are around 40 other objects that may be classified as dwarf planet and receive a name some time in future. Scientists in their rush to punish Pluto for not behaving like a planet (or maybe because they are against little planets?) made up this new category of 'Dwarf Planet" sadly like most human ventures into insanity, they failed to take care of loose ends, now with greater observation techniques and tools we are discovering a whole slew of new objects that are on the verge of being 'dwarf planet' or Plutoid in nature. I read recently (here's the link: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/060824_pluto_follow.html) that the morons, er I mean scientists are not imaginative enough to come up with more names for objects. Granted they said "....(snip) have classic planet names from Roman mythology. If that theme is extended to other dwarf planets, there won't be enough names, Brown points out. " Obviously they did not spend enough time studying Roman mythology, spending a lot of time with their heads in and above the clouds and not paying attention in school. (Humor is in this post, or my own personal brand of insanity - so laugh dammit laugh!)
  • All of them, at least in our solar system. :-)
  • my very educted mother just served us nine pizzas. mercury venus earth mars jupiter saturn uranus neptune pluto. since pluto isnt considered a planet anymore maybe we can say My very educated mother just served us nan
  • Mercury Mars Venus Earth Jupiter Neptune Saturn (my fav) Pluto Uranus
  • Planet Funk Planet Hollywood Planet of the Apes Digital Planets
  • Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Now, are we counting drawf planets too? Pluto Ceres That's all that I know.
  • All of them in our solar system.
  • Venus Mars Earth Saturn Uranus Jupiter Neptune Mercury (took me a moment to remember that one, I was getting worried...) I'll say Pluto too, as I feel sorry for the poor fella.
  • Loads... Earth, Mars, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury. Uranus, Neptune, Pluto (don't care what they say!), Tatooine, Arakis, Ix, Hoth, Klingon, Vulcan, Chapterhouse, Middle Earth?, Giedi Prime, Cardassia, Bejor, Cybertron.... I can go on.

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