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How to say "Great" in Japanese

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

Japanese Option A

碩果不食

せきかふしょく (sekikafushoku)
C2 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Option B

碩師名人

せきしめいじん (sekishimeijin)
C2 / CEFR Syllabus

Nuance Contrast & Translation Difference

When translating "great" into Japanese, you must choose carefully between 碩果不食 and 碩師名人. In Japanese, 碩果不食 (せきかふしょく (sekikafushoku)) is typically associated with "a great person who survives disaster" (Syllabus Level: C2) and represents Essential structural term in CEFR C2 vocabulary syllabus.. On the other hand, 碩師名人 (せきしめいじん (sekishimeijin)) maps to "A great teacher or master" (Syllabus Level: C2) and represents Essential structural term in CEFR C2 vocabulary syllabus.. A literal translation of "great" can often sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers if mixed up!
Bilingual Context for "碩果不食"
私は碩果不食に興味があります。
I am interested in a great person who survives disaster.
Bilingual Context for "碩師名人"
私は碩師名人に興味があります。
I am interested in A great teacher or master.

Nuance Mastery Quiz

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "私は ___ に興味があります。" (Meaning: "I am interested in a great person who survives disaster.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "碩果不食" fits here because it means "a great person who survives disaster" in the context of: "I am interested in a great person who survives disaster.". "碩師名人" represents "A great teacher or master".

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