There are two planets that rotate clockwise, i.e. with retrograde motion; Venus and Uranus.
Venus is. Venus is the second planet outward from the sun, Mars is the fourth.
Planet classification of this sort is only a Star Trek invention. It does not exist in science. "M-class" presumably denoted a planet suitable for earthlings....or Vulcans...or whatever. So the answer is....right here. ............. dude what he meant is simply what is the nearest planet that we know of.....aside from earth.... that may have a possibility of being m-class (by the term rich with water and in the "Goldilocks" zone) by what i have see in a recent set of documentaries they think the nearest planet like that may be 20 light years away... which in the scale of our galaxy inst really too far away XD
it is a planet and if you go to what does venus look like.com then it will probably tell you
The planet Venus. See more details here: http://www.answers.com/topic/Venus
It is Venus , the nearest planet to our planet .
The planet nearest to the Earth is Venus. That is, of course, when it's correctly placed in its orbit relative to the Earth.
Venus is the second closest planet to the sun. Mercury is the nearest.
Venus is the second nearest planet to the sun.
VENUS!
Venus
Mercury is the nearest planet to the sun in our solar system. It is about 36 million miles away from the sun on average.
Venus
Venus
The planet Venus is the second planet from the Sun, i.e. it is next after Mercury which is the nearest planet to the Sun.
Venus is the second closest after Mercury.
Venus is the second nearest planet to the Sun. It's only the 6th biggest planet.