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Quadruple VS

Synonym Boundary: "曇る", "病気になる", "独立する", "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

病気になる

びょうきになる (byōki ni naru)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option C

独立する

どくりつする (dokuritsusuru)
N3 / 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", "病気になる", "独立する", "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.
  • 病気になる (びょうきになる (byōki ni naru) - Level: N4): Maps to "to become sick; to get ill" and is used when 「病気」は名詞で、「〜になる」は状態の変化を表す動詞です。健康な状態から病気の状態へ変わることを指します。.
  • 独立する (どくりつする (dokuritsusuru) - Level: N3): Maps to "to become independent; to stand alone" and is used when Used when a country gains sovereignty, an individual becomes self-reliant and lives apart from their family, or an organization/unit operates autonomously..
  • 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.
Mixing these up can easily lead to unnatural translations. Refer to the bilingual context cards below to master the boundaries!
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 "病気になる"
熱があって、病気になりました。
I had a fever and became sick.
Context for "独立する"
彼は大学を卒業後、実家から独立した。
After graduating from university, he became independent from his parents' home.
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.".

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