Imagine you have a ball and you throw it straight up, it goes up, stops for a moment, and comes back down. Now think of Earth as that ball.
What is means something happens or exists in one place, like your favorite toy being on the floor. Another means there's also something similar happening somewhere else, like having another toy, but this one is on the table.
So when we say “What is” and “another” on the opposite side of Earth, it’s like saying: imagine you're playing with your favorite toy on the floor, and at the same time, someone far away (on the other side of the world) is also playing with their own favorite toy, maybe even the same kind!
It's as if there are two versions of you, one here and one on the other side of Earth, both doing something fun at the same time. That’s what it means when we say “What is” and “another”, they’re like twin moments happening far apart but at the same time! Imagine you have a ball and you throw it straight up, it goes up, stops for a moment, and comes back down. Now think of Earth as that ball.
What is means something happens or exists in one place, like your favorite toy being on the floor. Another means there's also something similar happening somewhere else, like having another toy, but this one is on the table.
So when we say “What is” and “another” on the opposite side of Earth, it’s like saying: imagine you're playing with your favorite toy on the floor, and at the same time, someone far away (on the other side of the world) is also playing with their own favorite toy, maybe even the same kind!
It's as if there are two versions of you, one here and one on the other side of Earth, both doing something fun at the same time. That’s what it means when we say “What is” and “another”, they’re like twin moments happening far apart but at the same time!
Examples
- A child wonders what lies on the other side of the world when they see a map.
- A student learns that every place has an opposite point on Earth.