When I was travelling in Mexico, on my own, recently graduated from university, on my way to Central and South America, and I was in Mexico City, I wanted to see the ruins of Teotihuacan but didn't know how to get there and my Spanish was rather limited as I was just learning to speak it. So in the streets behind the Zocalo cathedral, I asked some small kids how to get there, but I pronounced it something like Tee oh tee wa can and they both giggled and after I explained I wanted to see the pyramids they said that is Tay oh tee wacan is the correct pronounciation so that is an example of how I learned my Spanish and Indian names on my trip. The told me where to get the bus.
The answer is D: The moon’s surface reflects sunlight.
The moon is Earth´s natural satellite. It is an astronomical body that orbits the Earth in a synchronous rotation with it (that is why we can only see, from Earth, one of its sides, the other being the dark side of the moon). Since the moon, unlike the sun which is a star that produces energy and is, therefore, a light source, it does not shine through its own light, rather it can only reflect upon its surface the sun´s light allowing us to see it with our bare eyes from the Earth.