A ballpoint pen uses a tiny ball to help ink flow onto paper.
Imagine you have a small ball inside your pen, like a marble. This ball is covered in ink, and when you write, the ball rolls on the paper. As it rolls, it carries the ink with it, leaving a line behind. It’s just like when you roll a wet paintbrush across a canvas, the paint moves along with the brush.
How the Ball Moves
When you press down on the pen, the ball starts to move. The more pressure you use, the faster the ball rolls. This means more ink comes out and makes your writing darker. If you write lightly, the ball rolls slower, so less ink is used, like when you tap a paintbrush gently on paper.
Why It Doesn’t Leak
The ink inside the pen is thick, like syrup. Because it’s not runny, it doesn’t spill out all over your hand unless you shake the pen really hard, just like how syrup stays in a bottle unless you turn it upside down.
Examples
- A child draws a picture with a ballpoint pen on paper without making a mess.
- A student writes notes in class using a pen that doesn’t leak.
- A person signs a document with a pen that moves smoothly.
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See also
- Are Wooden Pencils Better Than Fountain Pens???
- How Ancient China Invented Paper—and Changed the World FOREVER!?
- How Does Movable Typeset Work?
- How Does You Should Use a Fountain Pen IF ... Work?
- How Does The most beautiful invention of all time Work?