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Synonym Comparison

The Nuance Difference: "とおく" vs "終わる"

Master the exact conceptual boundary between these Japanese terms.

Japanese Term A

とおく

とおく (tooku)
N5 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Term B

終わる

おわる (owaru)
N4 / CEFR Syllabus

Nuance Contrast & Social Differences

In Japanese, both とおく and 終わる are often translated to English but have distinct usages. とおく (とおく (tooku)) represents "far, distant" (Level: N5) and typically represents Describes distance. Opposite of ちかく. On the other hand, 終わる (おわる (owaru)) translates to "to finish, to end (intransitive)" (Level: N4) and is used for Intransitive verb. Used for things that finish by themselves or a process ending. The transitive form is 終える. Mixing these up can sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers!
Bilingual Sentence for "とおく"
わたしの家は会社から遠いです。
My house is far from the office.
Bilingual Sentence for "終わる"
仕事は5時に終わります。
Work finishes at 5 o'clock.

Nuance Mastery Quiz

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "わたしの家は会社から遠いです。" (Meaning: "My house is far from the office.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "とおく" fits here because it represents "far, distant" in the context: "My house is far from the office.".

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