2. The north magnetic pole, being the magnetic pole of the Earth's [magnetic field]?. It is so named due to its proximity to the geographic pole, but is in fact a south magnetic pole. (Either that, or every magnet is mislabelled. Magnetic opposites attract, and your magnet "N" points North!)
Astronomers define the north "geographic" pole of a planet by the planetary pole that is in the same ecliptic hemisphere as the Earth's north pole in the solar system. For the magnetic poles, their names are decided upon by the direction that their field lines emerge or enter the planet's crust. If they enter the same was as they do for Earth at the north pole, we call this the planet's north magnetic pole. But, magnetic poles can flip flop from north to south and back again. The Earth's poles have done this repeatedly throughout history, and 500,000 years ago, the south magnetic poles was at the North Pole.
Saturn's moon Hyperion is the only object in the solar system that is known to lack a geographic north pole. It rotates chaotically? due to a combination of its irregular shape and tidal influences from nearby moons.
The axial tilt of the planet Uranus is very nearly 90 degrees relative to the ecliptic plane, so that labelling one pole or the other to be the "north" pole is still a matter of some dispute.