I guess it all depends if you mean the most basic forms of each or a modern version. The first recorded writing implement was a burnt tipped stick from a camp fire. The charcoal allowed the user to write on rocks, wood, and themselves. Pigments made from plants, soil, and other naturally occurring items mixxed with water were used as dipping pens in which the pen was the finger tip and then later a stick.
EDIT
The Pen.
As early as 4,000 B.C., ancient peoples used crude pens consisting of hollow straws or reeds that supported a short column of liquid. During the 500's B.C., people began to make pens from the wing feathers of such birds as geese and swans. The shaft of the feathers was hardened, and the writing tip was shaped and slit to make writing easy. These feather pens were known as quill pens, and they were widely used until the development of steel-nib pens in the 1800's.
By the late 1800's, inventors had perfected an early version of the fountain pen. This pen represented a major improvement over previous pens, because it featured an ink reservoir and a capillary feed. Earlier pens held only a small amount of ink at a time and had to be repeatedly dipped in ink.
The First Fountain Pen In 1883
The earliest pencils date back to the ancient Greeks and Romans, who used flat cakes of lead to mark faint black lines on papyrus (an early form of paper) to guide writers. In the Middle Ages, people used thin rods of lead or silver for drawing. The marking ability of graphite was discovered in the 1500's, and the first modern pencil-that is, one consisting of a wood case glued around a stick of graphite-was made in the late 1700's.
In 1795, Nicholas Jacques Conte, a French chemist, developed a pencil of powdered graphite and clay. His mixture proved to be as smooth and hard as pure graphite. Conte also discovered that a harder or softer writing core could be produced by varying the proportions of clay and graphite.
In the mid-1800's, William Monroe, a Massachusetts cabinetmaker, invented a machine that cut and grooved wood slats precisely enough to make pencils. About the same time, the American inventor Joseph Dixon developed the method of cuffing single cedar cylinders in half to receive the core and then gluing them back together. In 1861, the first pencil-making factory in the United States was built in New York City by Eberhard Faber, an American manufacturer. The first mechanical pencil was patented by the Eagle Pencil Company in 1879.
Srouce. http://www.woodpensonline.com/history.htm
In alphabetical order, "lid" comes before "pen" and "pencil" comes before "pen."
im not sure but im just going to go with the pencil it just sounds right
The ink pen was invented before the pencil. The first ink pen dates back to ancient times, while the modern pencil as we know it today was developed in the 16th century.
A pen generally lasts longer than a pencil because the ink in a pen typically lasts longer than the graphite in a pencil. Additionally, pens tend to be more durable and resistant to breakage compared to pencils.
A pen uses ink to write, while a pencil uses graphite. The pen has a fixed tip size whereas a pencil can be sharpened to change the tip size. Pens are typically not erasable, while pencil marks can be erased.
In alphabetical order, "lid" comes before "pen" and "pencil" comes before "pen."
im not sure but im just going to go with the pencil it just sounds right
pen--because alphabetical order depends on factors:-Alphabet letters, literally (spaces DO NOT make them differ)-If similar thus far, the shorter one comes first
The ink pen was invented before the pencil. The first ink pen dates back to ancient times, while the modern pencil as we know it today was developed in the 16th century.
Any Pentel R3 pen. I have an aluminum Pentel pen which came with a matching mechanical pencil. I received the pen set in 1978 and I still use the pen.
yes they are called pen pencil or mechanical pencil. you have to click it like a pen for the led to come out
How about a pencil.
A pen book
Pen only, pencil can be erased
A pencil or pen
No, it's a pen.
2 Pen-cil