Time Is Something We Feel, Not See
Time isn’t like a rock or a cloud — it’s not something we can touch or see. Instead, it’s a way we measure how things change. We use clocks and calendars to keep track of time, but time itself doesn’t have a shape or color. It’s always moving, even if we can’t see it with our eyes.
How We Know It’s There
We know time exists because we can see its effects. People grow older, the sun rises and sets, and seasons come and go. These changes help us understand that time is always moving forward. Some scientists even study how time might behave differently in space or at very high speeds.
FAQs
Q: Can time go backward?
A: In real life, time only moves forward. Some science stories imagine time travel, but we haven’t figured out how to do that.
Q: Do animals know what time it is?
A: Animals don’t use clocks, but many know when to sleep, eat, or migrate based on patterns in nature.