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How to say "Tear" in Japanese

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

Japanese Option A

綻び

ほころび (hokorobi)
N1 / CEFR Syllabus
VS
Japanese Option B

劈く

劈く(つんざく)
C2PLUS / CEFR Syllabus

Nuance Contrast & Translation Difference

When translating "tear" into Japanese, you must choose carefully between 綻び and 劈く. In Japanese, 綻び (ほころび (hokorobi)) is typically associated with "tear, rip, loose thread (in clothes); a crack/flaw (in a plan/relationship)" (Syllabus Level: N1) and represents Can refer to a physical tear in fabric or, metaphorically, a flaw or crack appearing in a plan, relationship, or perfect facade. Often used with が出る. On the other hand, 劈く (劈く(つんざく)) maps to "to tear, to rip, to rend; to pierce (e.g., a scream piercing the silence)" (Syllabus Level: C2PLUS) and represents Essential structural term in CEFR C2PLUS vocabulary syllabus.. A literal translation of "tear" can often sound unnatural to native Japanese speakers if mixed up!
Bilingual Context for "綻び"
古いコートの袖に綻びが見つかった。
A tear was found in the sleeve of the old coat.
Bilingual Context for "劈く"
毎日、日本語を練習するために劈く。
Every day, I tear, to rip, to rend; to pierce (e.g., a scream piercing the silence) to practice Japanese.

Nuance Mastery Quiz

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "古いコートの袖に ___ が見つかった。" (Meaning: "A tear was found in the sleeve of the old coat.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "綻び" fits here because it means "tear, rip, loose thread (in clothes); a crack/flaw (in a plan/relationship)" in the context of: "A tear was found in the sleeve of the old coat.". "劈く" represents "to tear, to rip, to rend; to pierce (e.g., a scream piercing the silence)".