Transparent, Translucent, and Opaque
Light and Shadows: Transparent, Translucent, and Opaque
Transparent, Translucent, and Opaque
Transparent, Translucent, and Opaque
What you'll learn
- Transparent materials, like clear glass, let almost all light pass through.
- Opaque materials, like wood or a brick wall, do not let light pass through at all.
- Translucent materials, like frosted glass, let some light through but we cannot see clearly through them.
- A wooden door is opaque, so it forms a dark, sharp shadow.
- Clear water in a glass is transparent, so we can see a spoon inside it.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Core idea
Verbal: Materials are grouped by how much light passes through them: transparent (all), translucent (some), and opaque (none).
Symbolic: clear glass = transparent | frosted glass = translucent | wood/brick = opaque
Visual: Hold up clear glass, butter paper, and a book to a lamp — you see clearly through glass, dimly through butter paper, and not at all through the book.
Level 2 — Going deeper
Think about where you see this idea in daily life at home and school — noticing it around you makes the concept easier to remember.
NCERT anchor
NCERT Looking Around 3 'seeing through things' activities have children test classroom objects for how much light passes through.
Worked example
You look through a clean window pane and see the garden clearly. What kind of material is the glass?
Step 1 — All the light and image passes through
Step 2 — Seeing clearly means it is **transparent**
Answer: **Transparent**
You hold up a wooden ruler to a lamp and see no light through it. What kind of material is wood?
Step 1 — No light passes through at all
Step 2 — Blocking all light means it is **opaque**
Answer: **Opaque**
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Opaque objects let all light through | Reversing opaque and transparent | Opaque objects block light completely |
| Translucent means fully clear | Confusing translucent with transparent | Translucent lets some light through, blurred view |
| Glass is always opaque | Wrong example choice | Clear glass is a common transparent material |
| Opaque objects cast no shadow | Missing shadow connection | Opaque objects block light and cast a clear shadow |
Quick check
- What does 'transparent' mean?
- Give one example of an opaque material.
- Can you see clearly through a translucent material?
- Stretch: Why does frosted glass in a bathroom window let light in but hide the view?
Revision tip: Sort three classroom objects into transparent, translucent, and opaque before attempting questions.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Transparent, Translucent, and Opaque.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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