🦅 Project Eagle
Synonym Comparison

The Nuance Difference: "食べる" vs "汚れる"

Master the exact conceptual boundary between these Japanese terms.

Japanese Term A

食べる

たべる (taberu)
N5 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Term B

汚れる

よごれる (yogoreru)
N4 / CEFR Syllabus

Nuance Contrast & Social Differences

In Japanese, both 食べる and 汚れる are often translated to English but have distinct usages. 食べる (たべる (taberu)) represents "to eat" (Level: N5) and typically represents Commonly used in daily life. Polite form is 食べます. On the other hand, 汚れる (よごれる (yogoreru)) translates to "to get dirty (intransitive)" (Level: N4) and is used for Used when something *becomes* dirty. It describes the state of becoming dirty, often without specifying an agent. Mixing these up can sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers!
Bilingual Sentence for "食べる"
毎日りんごを食べます。
I eat an apple every day.
Bilingual Sentence for "汚れる"
白い服が泥で汚れてしまいました。
My white clothes got dirty with mud.

Nuance Mastery Quiz

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "毎日りんごを食べます。" (Meaning: "I eat an apple every day.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "食べる" fits here because it represents "to eat" in the context: "I eat an apple every day.".

💡 Practice with AI! Live

Don't just read. Practice speaking this grammar with our interactive AI coach for free!

Try AI Speaking 👉