🦅 Project Eagle
Quadruple VS

Synonym Boundary: "気分", "気持ち", "すっきり", "釈然"

All represent the core concept "feeling", but require precise selection.

Japanese Option A

気分

きぶん (kibun)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option B

気持ち

きもち (kimochi)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option C

すっきり

すっきり (sukkiri)
N3 / CEFR
Japanese Option D

釈然

しゃくぜん (shakuzen)
N1 / CEFR

Quadruple VS Nuance Contrast & Social Differences

When expressing "feeling" in Japanese, you must carefully distinguish between "気分", "気持ち", "すっきり", "釈然" based on context.
  • 気分 (きぶん (kibun) - Level: N4): Maps to "feeling, mood" and is used when Describes one's emotional state or general feeling. Often used with がいい.
  • 気持ち (きもち (kimochi) - Level: N4): Maps to "feeling; sensation; mood" and is used when Refers to one's internal state or emotion, or a physical sensation. Can be positive or negative. Often used in phrases like 気持ちがいい.
  • すっきり (すっきり (sukkiri) - Level: N3): Maps to "feeling refreshed, neat, tidy, clear (of a problem)" and is used when An adverb.
  • 釈然 (しゃくぜん (shakuzen) - Level: N1): Maps to "feeling relieved/clear (of doubt), convinced" and is used when Most commonly used in the negative form 「釈然としない」 to express a feeling of not being clear, not convinced, or still having doubts. ポジティブな意味で「釈然とする」と使うことは稀。.
Mixing these up can easily lead to unnatural translations. Refer to the bilingual context cards below to master the boundaries!
Context for "気分"
今日は気分がいいです。
I feel good today.
Context for "気持ち"
彼の気持ちがよく分かります。
I understand his feelings very well.
Context for "すっきり"
シャワーを浴びて、気分がすっきりした。
After taking a shower, I felt refreshed.
Context for "釈然"
彼の説明を聞いても、まだ釈然としない部分がある。
Even after hearing his explanation, there are still parts that I'm not convinced by.

Synonym Mastery Challenge

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "今日は ___ がいいです。" (Meaning: "I feel good today.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "気分" is correct here because it represents "feeling, mood" in the context: "I feel good today.".

💡 Practice with AI! Live

Don't just read. Practice speaking this grammar with our interactive AI coach for free!

Try AI Speaking 👉