Short articles and everyday conversations — Arabic fully vowelled, Japanese with furigana, English, Indonesian, and Chinese, each with a Thai gloss. Pick a language, pick a field, start reading.
25 conversations · science · page 1 / 2
Two students discuss how water evaporates, forms clouds, and falls back as rain.
A child asks a parent to explain how plants make their own food using sunlight.
Two elementary school friends wonder why things fall down and learn about gravity.
A student asks a school nurse to explain what the heart does and why it beats.
Two friends observe clouds and talk about the different types and what they predict.
A child and grandparent experiment with magnets and discover the basics of magnetic force.
Two siblings gaze at the night sky and talk about what stars are and how constellations got their names.
A teacher and student examine an insect and learn about its three body parts and six legs.
A grandmother explains to her grandchild why the Earth has seasons based on its tilt and orbit.
Two high school students discuss the geological processes behind volcanic eruptions.
Two university students discuss how DNA carries genetic information and how traits are passed to offspring.
A science club member and their friend compare the eight planets of the solar system.
Two science club members discuss the optical principles behind how rainbows appear in the sky.
A biology teacher and student discuss predator-prey relationships and how ecosystems stay balanced.
Two friends discuss how different brain regions handle memory, emotion, and decision-making.
A high school chemistry student and teacher discuss the structure of the periodic table and why elements are arranged as they are.
Two students experiment with prisms and learn how white light splits into a spectrum of colors.
Two physics graduate students debate wave-particle duality and the uncertainty principle.
Two astrophysics researchers discuss the structure of black holes, event horizons, and Hawking radiation.
Two bioethics researchers discuss the scientific promise and ethical boundaries of CRISPR-Cas9 technology.
A climate scientist and a science journalist discuss feedback loops, carbon cycles, and the scientific consensus on global warming.
Two computer science researchers discuss neural network architectures, training methods, and the limits of current AI.
Two neuroscientists discuss how synaptic plasticity underlies learning and memory consolidation.
Two cosmologists discuss the observational evidence for dark matter and dark energy and current detection efforts.