Learn Planets for BABY 🌎🪐 | Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune
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- Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024
- #atoyday #planetcomparison #planetsize #solarsystemsize #planetforkid #planetforbaby
Enjoy the best comparison of 8 Planets of the Solar System. This simple funny educational videos help to imagine sizes of our planets for kids of all ages.
Hungry Planets
Hungry Sun
Hungry Ice Scoop Planets
Ice Cream Planets
Dwarf Planets
Hungry Dwarf Planets
Glass Planets
Jupiter vs Planets
Vacuum Planets
Hungry Planets 2
Plane Sizes
Choose Ice Cream
Jumping Planets
Monster Planet
Music with Planets
Black Hole
Planet Sizes
Learn Dwarf Planets
Ghost Planets
Color Ghost Planets
Ghost Planets Game
Catch the Planet
Planet Band
Color Planets
Planets Sport
Planet comparison
Planet Soccer
Planets for Baby
Enjoy the best comparison of 8 Planets of the Solar System. This simple funny educational videos help to imagine sizes of our planets for kids of all ages. Hungry planets pretend playing game to compare the size of each other. Planets play at the playground. You can compare dwarf planets, their sizes, all 8 planets sizes, and just compare Jupiter ride a seesaw with other Planets. Kids can help to find the corresponding size of the planet.
The smallest planet in the Solar System is Mercury, next one in size is Mars, Venus is much bigger, our Earth is almost the same size, next one is a giant Neptune, Uranus is a little bigger, then Saturn, and biggest planet of the Solar System is Jupiter. However all the planets are small babies when you see how huge the Sun is!
Excellent for the preschool, kindergarten or elementary school lessons.
Hope you can learn something new and at the same time smile when you watch our video! Enjoy and subscribe to watch more!
How to learn the order of the planets?
Just remember:
My Mercury
Very Venus
Educated Earth
Mom Mars
Just Jupiter
Served Saturn
Us Uranus
Nachos Neptune
But where is Pluto? Pluto is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 and was originally considered to be the ninth planet from the Sun. Pluto is very small, only about half the width of the United States, that's the main reason why Pluto was relegated to "dwarf-planet" status by the International Astronomical Union in 2006.
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