Quadruple VS
Synonym Boundary: "曇る", "潤む", "げっそり", "汗ばむ"
All represent the core concept "become", but require precise selection.
Japanese Option A
曇る
くもる (kumoru)
N5 / CEFR
Japanese Option B
潤む
うるむ (urumu)
N2 / CEFR
Japanese Option C
げっそり
げっそり (gessori)
N2 / CEFR
Japanese Option D
汗ばむ
あせばむ (asebamu)
N2 / CEFR
Quadruple VS Nuance Contrast & Social Differences
When expressing "become" in Japanese, you must carefully distinguish between "曇る", "潤む", "げっそり", "汗ばむ" based on context.
- 曇る (くもる (kumoru) - Level: N5): Maps to "to become cloudy, to cloud over" and is used when Describes the sky becoming cloudy. Opposite of 晴れる.
- 潤む (うるむ (urumu) - Level: N2): Maps to "to become wet, to get teary, to blur (due to moisture)" and is used when Typically refers to eyes getting wet with tears, or a surface becoming moist. 涙や露などでしっとり濡れる。.
- げっそり (げっそり (gessori) - Level: N2): Maps to "become thin, lose a lot of weight (from worry/illness); feel disappointed/discouraged" and is used when Describes a sudden and significant loss of weight due to illness, worry, or shock, resulting in an emaciated appearance. Can also describe a feeling of deep disappointment..
- 汗ばむ (あせばむ (asebamu) - Level: N2): Maps to "to become sweaty, to perspire slightly" and is used when Describes the state of having a slight amount of sweat, indicating a mild level of perspiration rather than heavy sweating.
Context for "曇る"
今日は朝から曇っています。
It has been cloudy since this morning.
Context for "潤む"
感動的な話を聞いて、彼女の目が潤んだ。
Hearing the moving story, her eyes welled up with tears.
Context for "げっそり"
彼は病気でげっそり痩せてしまった。
He became terribly thin from illness.
Context for "汗ばむ"
少し歩いただけなのに、体がじわっと汗ばんだ。
Even though I only walked a little, my body became slightly sweaty.
Synonym Mastery Challenge
Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?
Fill in the blank: "今日は朝から曇っています。" (Meaning: "It has been cloudy since this morning.")
🎉 Correct Answer!
Remember: "曇る" is correct here because it represents "to become cloudy, to cloud over" in the context: "It has been cloudy since this morning.".