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How to say "Go" in Japanese

Both words can translate to "go", but which should you choose?

Japanese Option A

出張する

しゅっちょうする (shucchō suru)
N4 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Option B

矯枉過直

きょうおうかちょく
C2PLUS / CEFR Syllabus

Nuance Contrast & Translation Difference

When translating "go" into Japanese, you must choose carefully between 出張する and 矯枉過直. In Japanese, 出張する (しゅっちょうする (shucchō suru)) is typically associated with "to go on a business trip" (Syllabus Level: N4) and represents This verb specifically refers to traveling for business purposes. Often used with a destination. On the other hand, 矯枉過直 (きょうおうかちょく) maps to "To go too far in correcting a fault, thereby creating a new one (lit. 'to straighten the bent too much, making it overly straight')." (Syllabus Level: C2PLUS) and represents Essential structural term in CEFR C2PLUS vocabulary syllabus.. A literal translation of "go" can often sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers if mixed up!
Bilingual Context for "出張する"
来週、大阪へ出張します。
I will go on a business trip to Osaka next week.
Bilingual Context for "矯枉過直"
毎日、日本語を練習するために矯枉過直。
Every day, I go too far in correcting a fault, thereby creating a new one (lit. 'to straighten the bent too much, making it overly straight'). to practice Japanese.

Nuance Mastery Quiz

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "来週、大阪へ出張します。" (Meaning: "I will go on a business trip to Osaka next week.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "出張する" fits here because it means "to go on a business trip" in the context of: "I will go on a business trip to Osaka next week.". "矯枉過直" represents "To go too far in correcting a fault, thereby creating a new one (lit. 'to straighten the bent too much, making it overly straight').".