Synonym Nuance VS
How to say "High" in Japanese
Both words can translate to "high", but which should you choose?
Japanese Option A
たかい
たかい (takai)
N5 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Option B
桂玉之嘆
けいぎょくのたん (keigyokunotan)
C2 / CEFR Syllabus
Nuance Contrast & Translation Difference
When translating "high" into Japanese, you must choose carefully between たかい and 桂玉之嘆.
In Japanese, たかい (たかい (takai)) is typically associated with "high, tall; expensive" (Syllabus Level: N5) and represents An い-adjective. Has two main meanings: 'high/tall'.
On the other hand, 桂玉之嘆 (けいぎょくのたん (keigyokunotan)) maps to "High cost of living in a city" (Syllabus Level: C2) and represents Essential structural term in CEFR C2 vocabulary syllabus.. A literal translation of "high" can often sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers if mixed up!
Bilingual Context for "たかい"
あのビルはとてもたかいです。/ この時計はたかいです。
That building is very tall. / This watch is expensive.
Bilingual Context for "桂玉之嘆"
私は桂玉之嘆に興味があります。
I am interested in High cost of living in a city.
Nuance Mastery Quiz
Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?
Fill in the blank: "あのビルはとても ___ です。/ この時計は ___ です。" (Meaning: "That building is very tall. / This watch is expensive.")
🎉 Correct Answer!
Remember: "たかい" fits here because it means "high, tall; expensive" in the context of: "That building is very tall. / This watch is expensive.". "桂玉之嘆" represents "High cost of living in a city".