Guide
A clear method for reading placements like Moon in Aries, Venus in Scorpio, or Mars in Virgo.
Choose a starting point, then follow the linked pages when you want more context.
A planet in a sign is not just two keywords pasted together. The planet names the function, and the sign describes how that function expresses itself.
This is why Moon in Aries, Venus in Aries, and Mars in Aries share a style but do not mean the same thing.
First ask what the planet does: feeling, desire, action, thought, growth, or structure. Then ask how the sign expresses that function.
That order keeps placement pages distinct from basic zodiac-sign pages.
The sign gives style, but the house gives the life area. Without the house, a placement can stay accurate but too abstract.
If one sign holds several planets, read the pattern as emphasis. If one planet forms major aspects, read those contacts before making the placement too simple.
Enter birth date, time, timezone, and location details to generate an in-browser natal chart with placements, aspects, houses, and a visual wheel.
GuideLearn what the Moon sign describes, why it matters, and how to read it alongside the Sun and Rising signs.
GuideUnderstand what the Venus sign says about attraction, taste, affection, and relationship style in astrology.
GuideLearn a practical order for reading natal charts without getting buried in symbolism too early.