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Science, Tech & Future

What Heat and Temperature Mean

A1 A2 B1 B2

A warm mug and a warm metal spoon can feel different. This article explains temperature (how hot) and heat (moving energy), and why materials change temperature in different ways.

A1 Level

Why a warm spoon can feel “hotter” than a warm mug

Heat and Temperature: Not the Same

Why a warm spoon can feel “hotter” than a warm mug

Alex holds a warm mug. It feels nice.
Then Alex touches a warm metal spoon.
The spoon feels “more hot.”
Alex thinks, “Is the spoon hotter?”

Here is the simple idea.
Temperature tells how hot or cold something is.
It is a “state” of the thing. It is not moving.

Heat is different.
Heat is energy that moves.
Heat moves from a warmer thing to a cooler thing.
So, heat can flow from the mug to Alex’s hand.

But why does metal feel different?
Some materials take in and pass energy faster.
Metal often moves heat quickly.
So it can pull heat from your skin fast, or push heat into your skin fast.
That fast change can feel strong.

Also, the same heat does not change all things the same way.
A small spoon can warm up fast.
A big mug of water warms more slowly.
They absorb energy differently.

So Alex learns this:
Temperature is “how hot.”
Heat is “moving energy.”
And materials can feel different, even at the same temperature.


Key Points

  • Temperature tells “how hot or cold” something is.
  • Heat is energy moving from warm to cool.

Words to Know

temperature /ˈtɛmprətʃər/ (n) — how hot or cold something is
heat /hiːt/ (n) — energy that can warm things
energy /ˈɛnərdʒi/ (n) — power to do work or cause change
warm /wɔːrm/ (adj) — a little hot
cool /kuːl/ (adj) — a little cold
move /muːv/ (v) — go from one place to another
material /məˈtɪriəl/ (n) — what something is made of
absorb /əbˈzɔːrb/ (v) — take in


📝 Practice Questions

A1 – True/False

  1. Temperature tells how hot or cold something is.
  2. Heat moves from cooler objects to warmer objects.
  3. A spoon and a mug can feel different even if they are similar in temperature.

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What does temperature tell?
    A. How hot or cold something is
    B. How fast you can move it
    C. How loud it is
  2. Heat usually moves from a _ thing to a _ thing.
    A. cooler, warmer
    B. warmer, cooler
    C. smaller, bigger
  3. Why can a metal spoon feel “more hot”?
    A. Metal is always hotter
    B. Metal is always colder
    C. Metal can move heat quickly

A1 – Short Answer

  1. Temperature is a ____ of a thing.
  2. Heat is energy that ____.
  3. Name one material in the story.

A1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. B
  3. C

A1 – Short Answer

  1. state
  2. moves
  3. mug / spoon
A2 Level

Same warm feeling, different science

Temperature and Heat: A Clear Difference

Same warm feeling, different science

Alex makes tea and sits down. The mug feels warm and comfortable.
Then Alex touches a metal spoon next to the mug. It feels “hotter,” even though both were near the tea.

So what is happening?

Temperature is “how hot”

Temperature describes how hot or cold something is right now.
It is a condition of the object. It is not a movement.
A mug can have a certain temperature, and a spoon can have a certain temperature too.

Heat is energy that moves

Heat is energy in transfer.
Heat moves from a warmer object to a cooler object.
When Alex’s hand touches the mug, heat can flow from the mug to the hand.
When Alex touches a cooler object, heat can flow the other way—from the hand to the object.

Why the same heat changes things differently

Different materials respond differently to the same amount of heat.
Some warm up fast. Some warm up slowly.
A small metal spoon can change temperature quickly.
A larger mug (especially with liquid inside) can absorb a lot of energy with a smaller change in temperature.

Also, metal often moves energy quickly. That can make your skin change temperature faster, and your brain feels it strongly.

In daily life, this is useful.
When you hear “temperature,” think “how hot.”
When you hear “heat,” think “energy moving.”
And remember: the same heat can create different temperature changes, depending on the material.


Key Points

  • Temperature measures hot/cold; it is a state, not a movement.
  • Heat is energy in transfer, moving from warm to cool.
  • The same heat can change materials differently because they absorb energy differently.

Words to Know

describe /dɪˈskraɪb/ (v) — say what something is like
state /steɪt/ (n) — a condition at one time
transfer /trænsˈfɜːr/ (n) — moving from one place to another
flow /floʊ/ (v) — move smoothly from one place to another
respond /rɪˈspɑːnd/ (v) — react or change because of something
amount /əˈmaʊnt/ (n) — how much of something
absorb /əbˈzɔːrb/ (v) — take in energy or liquid
quickly /ˈkwɪkli/ (adv) — fast
slowly /ˈsloʊli/ (adv) — not fast


📝 Practice Questions

A2 – True/False

  1. Temperature is a state of an object, not a movement.
  2. Heat is energy in transfer because of a temperature difference.
  3. The same heat always changes every material the same amount.

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. Which sentence best matches “heat”?
    A. A number that describes how cold it is
    B. Energy moving from warm to cool
    C. A color you can see
  2. What is temperature mainly about?
    A. The movement of air
    B. The taste of food
    C. How hot or cold something is
  3. Why can a small spoon warm up faster than a large mug?
    A. It can change temperature more quickly
    B. It is always at a higher temperature
    C. It makes heat disappear

A2 – Short Answer

  1. Heat usually moves from _ to _.
  2. Temperature describes “how ____” something is.
  3. Give one reason metal can feel different on your skin.

A2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. B
  2. C
  3. A

A2 – Short Answer

  1. warm(er), cool(er)
  2. hot
  3. Metal moves heat quickly / it changes your skin temperature fast
B1 Level

Why metal can feel “hotter” than a mug

Heat vs Temperature in Everyday Life

Why metal can feel “hotter” than a mug

Alex is cleaning up after tea. The mug is warm. The spoon is warm too.
But when Alex touches them, the spoon feels sharper and “more hot.”
Alex pauses: “Are they really different temperatures, or is my hand being tricked?”

Temperature: a condition, not a traveler

Temperature tells how hot or cold something is at a moment.
It is a state of the object.
A spoon can be warm. A mug can be warm. That is temperature.

Heat: energy on the move

Heat is energy in transfer.
It moves from warmer to cooler objects.
When Alex touches the mug, heat flows from the mug to the hand.
If Alex touches a cooler table, heat flows from the hand to the table.

This matters because heat causes temperature to change.
When heat enters an object, its temperature often rises.
When heat leaves, its temperature often falls.

Same heat, different changes

Here is the surprising part: the same heat can lead to different results in different materials.
Some things can take in a lot of energy with only a small temperature change.
Other things change temperature quickly with the same energy.

Size matters too. A small spoon can warm up fast.
A larger mug (especially with liquid inside) can absorb more energy without changing temperature as fast.

And metal often moves heat through itself quickly.
So your skin can gain or lose heat faster when you touch metal.
That fast change is one reason metal can feel “hotter” or “colder,” even when the actual temperature is similar.

Alex learns a calm conclusion:
Temperature is “how hot.” Heat is “energy moving.”
And feeling is not always the same as temperature.


Key Points

  • Temperature measures hot/cold; it is a state, not a movement.
  • Heat is energy in transfer, moving from warm to cool.
  • The same heat can change different materials by different amounts.

Words to Know

condition /kənˈdɪʃən/ (n) — a state something is in
moment /ˈmoʊmənt/ (n) — a short time
transfer /trænsˈfɜːr/ (n) — movement from one place to another
cause /kɔːz/ (v) — make something happen
enter /ˈɛntər/ (v) — go into
leave /liːv/ (v) — go away from
rise /raɪz/ (v) — go up
fall /fɔːl/ (v) — go down
result /rɪˈzʌlt/ (n) — what happens in the end
similar /ˈsɪmələr/ (adj) — almost the same
actual /ˈækʧuəl/ (adj) — real; true


📝 Practice Questions

B1 – True/False

  1. Heat flow can cause an object’s temperature to rise or fall.
  2. Your skin senses heat flow when you touch an object.
  3. Temperature is energy traveling from one object to another.

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is the best definition of temperature in the article?
    A. Energy moving between objects
    B. A tool that makes things warm
    C. A measure of how hot or cold something is
  2. Which idea explains “same heat, different change”?
    A. Different materials absorb energy differently
    B. Heat only moves in air
    C. Metal cannot be warm
  3. Why can metal feel “stronger” to touch?
    A. Metal changes color quickly
    B. Metal can move heat through itself fast
    C. Metal has no temperature

B1 – Short Answer

  1. Explain the difference between heat and temperature in one sentence.
  2. Why might a mug change temperature more slowly than a spoon?
  3. What does your hand feel more directly: temperature or heat flow?

B1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. C
  2. A
  3. B

B1 – Short Answer

  1. Temperature is how hot/cold; heat is energy moving between things.
  2. It is larger and can absorb more energy (often with liquid inside).
  3. Heat flow
B2 Level

Why “feels hotter” is not always “is hotter”

Heat and Temperature: The Difference Your Skin Can’t See

Why “feels hotter” is not always “is hotter”

Alex sits at a kitchen table with a warm mug of tea. A metal spoon rests beside it.
Out of curiosity, Alex touches both. The mug feels gently warm. The spoon feels intense—almost “hot.”
Alex pulls back and laughs: “How can they feel so different?”

That small moment reveals a common confusion: we often use heat and temperature as the same word, but they are not the same idea.

Temperature is a state you can describe

Temperature measures how hot or cold something is at a given time.
It describes the object’s condition—like saying, “This mug is warm.”
Temperature is not a movement. It is not traveling from place to place.
It is simply a way to describe “how hot” something is right now.

Heat is energy in transfer

Heat is energy moving because there is a temperature difference.
When two things touch, energy can flow from the warmer one to the cooler one.
That flow is heat.

This is why your hand matters in the story. Your skin has its own temperature.
If the spoon is cooler than your skin, heat flows from your hand into the spoon.
If the spoon is warmer than your skin, heat flows from the spoon into your hand.
Either way, your brain is noticing the flow of energy, not just the number we call temperature.

The same heat does not change everything equally

Here is the deeper idea: even if the same amount of heat energy is involved, different materials can change temperature by different amounts.

Some materials absorb energy in a way that makes their temperature rise quickly.
Others can absorb a lot of energy with a smaller temperature change.
Also, the size and thickness of an object matters. A small spoon can change temperature faster than a large mug with liquid inside.

On top of that, some materials move energy through themselves quickly.
Metal often passes energy fast, so your skin can warm up or cool down quickly at the contact point.
That quick change can feel “strong,” even if the spoon and mug are at similar temperatures.

So what was “actually hotter”?
The best answer is: your feeling alone cannot prove it.
To know temperature, you need a measurement.
But your hand is still giving you useful information: it is sensing how quickly heat is flowing.

Alex finishes the tea with a new habit of mind:
Use temperature for “how hot.” Use heat for “energy moving.”
And when two objects feel different, remember to ask: “Is the temperature different—or is the heat flow different?”


Key Points

  • Temperature measures hot/cold; it is a state of a thing, not a movement.
  • Heat is energy in transfer, moving from warmer to cooler objects.
  • The same heat can change different materials by different amounts because they absorb energy differently.

Words to Know

curiosity /ˌkjʊriˈɑːsəti/ (n) — a strong wish to know
intense /ɪnˈtɛns/ (adj) — very strong
confusion /kənˈfjuːʒən/ (n) — not understanding clearly
describe /dɪˈskraɪb/ (v) — explain what something is like
measure /ˈmɛʒər/ (v) — find the amount or level of something
given /ˈɡɪvən/ (adj) — fixed; specific
difference /ˈdɪfərəns/ (n) — how things are not the same
flow /floʊ/ (n) — movement from one place to another
involved /ɪnˈvɑːlvd/ (adj) — part of a situation
absorb /əbˈzɔːrb/ (v) — take in
thickness /ˈθɪknəs/ (n) — how thick something is
contact /ˈkɑːntækt/ (n) — touch between things
prove /pruːv/ (v) — show something is true
measurement /ˈmɛʒərmənt/ (n) — the act of measuring


📝 Practice Questions

B2 – True/False

  1. “Feels hotter” can be caused by faster heat transfer, not higher temperature.
  2. Temperature is a movement of energy between objects.
  3. Size and material both affect how an object’s temperature changes.

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. In the article, what does your skin notice most?
    A. The flow of heat energy at the contact point
    B. The exact temperature number automatically
    C. The color of the object
  2. Which statement best fits the article’s meaning?
    A. Feeling is always more accurate than measurement
    B. Heat and temperature are the same idea
    C. Temperature describes a state; heat describes energy in transfer
  3. Why can the same heat lead to different temperature changes?
    A. Temperature is not real
    B. Materials absorb energy in different ways
    C. Heat only exists in metal

B2 – Short Answer

  1. Explain why a warm spoon can feel hotter than a warm mug.
  2. Give two factors that affect how an object’s temperature changes with heat.
  3. How will you use the words “temperature” and “heat” more carefully after reading?

B2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. C
  3. B

B2 – Short Answer

  1. Because metal can transfer heat faster, making your skin change temperature quickly.
  2. Material type and size/thickness (also what’s inside, like liquid).
  3. Temperature = how hot/cold; heat = energy moving from warm to cool.