Synonym Comparison
The Nuance Difference: "買う" vs "もっていく"
Master the exact conceptual boundary between these Japanese terms.
Japanese Term A
買う
かう (kau)
N5 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Term B
もっていく
もっていく (motte iku)
N5 / CEFR Syllabus
Nuance Contrast & Social Differences
In Japanese, both 買う and もっていく are often translated to English but have distinct usages.
買う (かう (kau)) represents "to buy" (Level: N5) and typically represents Commonly used for purchasing items. Polite form is 買います.
On the other hand, もっていく (もっていく (motte iku)) translates to "to take (something somewhere)" (Level: N5) and is used for Implies moving an object away from the current location towards another. '持っていく. Mixing these up can sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers!
Bilingual Sentence for "買う"
週末に新しい本を買いました。
I bought a new book on the weekend.
Bilingual Sentence for "もっていく"
明日、傘を持っていくのを忘れないでください。
Please don't forget to take your umbrella tomorrow.
Nuance Mastery Quiz
Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?
Fill in the blank: "週末に新しい本を買いました。" (Meaning: "I bought a new book on the weekend.")
🎉 Correct Answer!
Remember: "買う" fits here because it represents "to buy" in the context: "I bought a new book on the weekend.".