By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Show that air takes up space and has weight
  • 2Explain that wind is moving air and its uses
  • 3Name sources of fresh and salty water
  • 4Describe the four steps of the water cycle
  • 5Suggest ways to conserve water
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Why this chapter matters
Air and water are vital for all life. This chapter teaches children that air is everywhere and has properties, that wind is moving air, where water comes from, how the water cycle works, and why we must conserve water.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Air and Water

1. Air Is Everywhere

AIR is all around us. It is INVISIBLE but we can FEEL it.

'Close your eyes and take a deep breath. Can you feel the air entering your NOSE? Now hold your breath — see how your body NEEDS air!'

Where Is Air?

  • In the ROOM around you.
  • In the SOIL (worms need it).
  • In WATER (fish breathe dissolved air).
  • In a BALLOON (blow it up!).

2. Properties of Air

PropertyHow to See It
Air takes up SPACEBlow up a balloon — air fills it
Air has WEIGHTA blown balloon weighs more than an empty one
Air is INVISIBLEYou cannot see it, but you can feel it
Air has PRESSUREWhen you suck on a straw, air pressure pushes the drink up
Air can be COMPRESSEDPush the plunger of a syringe with the tip closed
Air is needed for BURNINGCover a candle with a glass — it goes out
Air is needed for BREATHINGWe breathe in oxygen from air

3. Moving Air — Wind

WIND is AIR that is MOVING.

'On a still day, the air feels CALM. On a windy day, you can FEEL the air rushing past you!'

Effects of Wind:

Gentle Wind (Breeze)Strong Wind (Storm)
Leaves rustleTrees bend
You feel coolYou can be pushed
Kites fly easilyRoofs can be damaged
Smoke driftsDust storms

Uses of Wind:

  • Drying CLOTHES.
  • Flying KITES.
  • Windmills make ELECTRICITY (wind energy).
  • Sailing BOATS.

4. Sources of Water

Water is found in MANY places on Earth.

SourceDescriptionType of Water
RAINWater falls from cloudsFresh
RIVERSFlowing water from mountains to seaFresh
LAKESLarge bodies of water surrounded by landFresh
PONDSSmall bodies of still waterFresh
WELLSWater from undergroundFresh
TAP WATERTreated water supplied to homesFresh
OCEANSVery large saltwater bodiesSALTY
GLACIERSFrozen water on mountainsFresh

5. The Water Cycle

The WATER CYCLE is how water moves from the Earth to the sky and back again.

'Water is NEVER lost. It keeps going around and around in a never-ending CYCLE.'

Step 1 — Evaporation:

The SUN heats water in oceans, rivers, and lakes. Water turns into WATER VAPOUR (a gas) and rises into the air.

'Think of puddles DISAPPEARING after rain. Where does the water go? It EVAPORATES into the air!'

Step 2 — Condensation:

Water vapour rises high in the sky where it is COLD. It turns back into tiny WATER DROPLETS. These droplets form CLOUDS.

'Have you seen water droplets on the OUTSIDE of a cold glass? That is CONDENSATION!'

Step 3 — Precipitation:

When the clouds get HEAVY with water droplets, the water falls back to Earth as RAIN (or snow/hail if it is very cold).

Step 4 — Collection:

The rainwater COLLECTS in rivers, lakes, and oceans. Some soaks into the ground. And the cycle STARTS AGAIN!


6. Water Conservation

Water is PRECIOUS. We must not WASTE it.

'Only about 1% of Earth's water is FRESH water that we can drink. We must use it CAREFULLY!'

How to Save Water:

Do ThisDon't Do This
Close the tap while brushingLet the tap run while brushing
Take SHORT showersTake long showers
Use a BUCKET to washUse a hose to wash
Fix LEAKING tapsIgnore dripping taps
Water plants in the MORNINGWater plants at noon (water evaporates!)
Collect RAINWATERLet rainwater go to waste

7. Common Mistakes

  1. Thinking air is nothing: 'Air IS something — it is a mixture of gases. It has weight and takes up space.'
  2. Believing the water cycle creates NEW water: 'NO new water is created. The SAME water has been cycling for millions of years!'
  3. Confusing evaporation and condensation: 'Evaporation is liquid → gas (water → water vapour). Condensation is gas → liquid (water vapour → water droplets).'
  4. Thinking only oceans have water: 'Water is found in rivers, lakes, ponds, wells, glaciers, and even underground. But most of Earth's water is in the OCEANS.'

8. Key Facts to Remember

  • 'Air is EVERYWHERE — it is invisible but takes up space and has weight.'
  • 'Wind is MOVING air.'
  • 'Water comes from RAIN, RIVERS, LAKES, PONDS, WELLS, and OCEANS.'
  • 'The WATER CYCLE has 4 steps: Evaporation, Condensation, Precipitation, Collection.'
  • 'We must CONSERVE water — do not waste it.'
  • 'Air is needed for BREATHING and BURNING.'

9. Self-Test

Q1: How can you prove that air takes up space?

Q2: What is wind?

Q3: Name the four steps of the water cycle.

Q4: What is evaporation? Give an example.

Q5: What is the difference between evaporation and condensation?

Q6: Name three sources of fresh water.

Q7: Why should we save water?

Q8: Why does a candle go out when covered with a glass?

Answers:

A1: Blow up a balloon — the air fills it and makes it expand. The air is taking up space inside. A2: Wind is MOVING AIR. A3: (1) Evaporation (2) Condensation (3) Precipitation (4) Collection. A4: Evaporation is liquid water turning into water VAPOUR (gas) by HEAT. Example: a puddle drying up in the sun. A5: Evaporation = liquid → gas (heating). Condensation = gas → liquid (cooling). A6: Rivers, lakes, ponds, wells, rain, glaciers (any three). A7: Only about 1% of Earth's water is fresh and drinkable. Water is limited. We need it for drinking, cooking, and farming. A8: The candle uses up the OXYGEN inside the glass. Without oxygen, the flame goes out.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Properties of air
Air takes up space, has weight, has pressure, and is needed for breathing and burning
Air is invisible but real matter.
The water cycle
Evaporation, condensation, precipitation, collection
No new water is created; the same water keeps cycling.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Thinking air is nothing
Air is matter; it has weight and takes up space.
WATCH OUT
Believing the water cycle makes new water
The same water has been cycling for millions of years.
WATCH OUT
Confusing evaporation and condensation
Evaporation is liquid to gas; condensation is gas to liquid.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Air
How can you prove that air takes up space?
Show solution
Blow up a balloon; the air fills it and makes it expand.
Q2EASY· Water Cycle
Name the four steps of the water cycle.
Show solution
Evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and collection.
Q3MEDIUM· Reasoning
What is the difference between evaporation and condensation?
Show solution
Evaporation is liquid turning into gas by heating; condensation is gas turning into liquid by cooling.
Q4EASY· Reasoning
Why does a candle go out when covered with a glass?
Show solution
It uses up the oxygen inside the glass, and without oxygen the flame goes out.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Air is everywhere; it is invisible but takes up space and has weight.
  • Wind is moving air.
  • Water comes from rain, rivers, lakes, ponds, wells, and oceans.
  • Ocean water is salty; most other sources are fresh.
  • Water cycle: evaporation, condensation, precipitation, collection.
  • No new water is created; it keeps cycling.
  • We must conserve water because fresh water is limited.

ICSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks, depending on the school paper

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Air and wind2-41-2Properties of air and wind
Water cycle / Conservation3-42Water sources, cycle steps, and saving water
Prep strategy
  • Learn simple proofs of air's properties
  • Memorise the four water cycle steps in order
  • Distinguish evaporation from condensation
  • List practical ways to save water

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Weather

The water cycle explains rain, clouds, and dew.

Wind energy

Moving air turns windmills to make electricity.

Saving resources

Conserving water keeps enough for everyone and the future.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Give a simple experiment to prove air's properties
  2. List the water cycle steps in the correct order
  3. Clearly contrast evaporation and condensation
  4. Suggest practical water-saving actions

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Watch water droplets form on a cold glass and explain why.
  • Make a poster of five ways your family can save water.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

ICSE Class 3 School ExamHigh
Science Olympiad (junior)Medium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The water cycle is the never-ending journey of water between the Earth and the sky. First, the Sun heats water in oceans, rivers, and lakes, and it turns into water vapour and rises; this is evaporation. High up where it is cold, the vapour turns back into tiny droplets that form clouds; this is condensation. When the clouds get heavy, the water falls as rain, snow, or hail; this is precipitation. The water then collects in rivers, lakes, and oceans, and the whole cycle begins again.

Although most of the Earth is covered in water, the vast majority of it is salty ocean water that we cannot drink or use for farming. Only about 1% of all the Earth's water is fresh water that is available for us to use. Because this drinkable water is so limited and so many people, plants, and animals need it, we must use it carefully and not waste it, for example by closing the tap while brushing and fixing leaking taps.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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