refraction
bends as it passes from air into water, causing the pencil to appear broken. This phenomenon is known as refraction.
-the pencil looks broken & bent in water. - the pencil looks bent, because of the refraction of light, that causes that to happen. -pencil looks really thick, in water.
You will observe a pencil on a glass of water. Unless you're not looking that way, in which case, you will observe whatever you happen to be looking at. Unless, you're blind, in which case you won't observe anything.
When a pencil is placed in a glass of water, it appears to bend or break at the water's surface due to refraction of light. This is because light changes speed when it moves from air to water, causing the illusion of the pencil bending or breaking.
When a pencil is placed in water, it appears to bend or break at the surface of the water due to refraction. This effect is caused by light rays bending as they pass from the water to the air, creating an optical illusion.
refraction
bends as it passes from air into water, causing the pencil to appear broken. This phenomenon is known as refraction.
-the pencil looks broken & bent in water. - the pencil looks bent, because of the refraction of light, that causes that to happen. -pencil looks really thick, in water.
You will observe a pencil on a glass of water. Unless you're not looking that way, in which case, you will observe whatever you happen to be looking at. Unless, you're blind, in which case you won't observe anything.
First, remove broken pieces slowly. Then obtain new pencil and try to relax this time.
When a pencil is placed in a half cup of water, it appears broken due to the refraction of light at the water's surface. This bending of light occurs because light travels at different speeds in air and water, causing the pencil to appear displaced or misaligned at the interface. The effect creates an optical illusion that makes the pencil seem fractured or bent at the water's edge.
If the speed of light were the same in air and water, then the pencil would appearstraight, NOT broken. The beginning of the simplest explanation of why it doesappear broken is the fact that the speed of light is different in air and in water,and that causes light to bend when goes from one into the other.
When a pencil is placed in a glass of water, it appears to bend or break at the water's surface due to refraction of light. This is because light changes speed when it moves from air to water, causing the illusion of the pencil bending or breaking.
The pronoun for "my pencil" in the sentence "my pencil is broken" would be "it." In this case, "it" is a singular pronoun that replaces the noun "pencil" to avoid repetition in the sentence. Pronouns like "it" help make sentences more concise and easier to read by referring back to a previously mentioned noun.
That is a very sharp response...Writing with a broken pencil is pointless...
broken pencil
It's a play on words. It would be pointless to try to write with a broken pencil because the pencil lead is not pointed.