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Quintuple VS

Synonym Boundary: "とる", "出す", "かかる", "だす", "浴びる"

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

Japanese Option A

とる

とる (toru)
N5 / CEFR
Japanese Option B

出す

だす (dasu)
N5 / CEFR
Japanese Option C

かかる

かかる (kakaru)
N5 / CEFR
Japanese Option D

だす

だす (dasu)
N5 / CEFR
Japanese Option E

浴びる

あびる (abiru)
N4 / CEFR

Quintuple VS Nuance Contrast & Social Differences

When expressing "take" in Japanese, you must carefully distinguish between "とる", "出す", "かかる", "だす", "浴びる" based on context.
  • とる (とる (toru) - Level: N5): Maps to "to take (a photo), to pick up, to get (a holiday)" and is used when A versatile verb. Common N5 meanings include 'to take a photo'.
  • 出す (だす (dasu) - Level: N5): Maps to "to take out, to send, to submit" and is used when 中にあるものを外へ移動させるときや、手紙などを送るときに使います。Polite form is 出します.
  • かかる (かかる (kakaru) - Level: N5): Maps to "to take (time/money), to hang (intransitive), to catch (a cold)" and is used when Intransitive verb. For N5, most commonly used to express how much time or money is required for something. e.g., 時間がかかる.
  • だす (だす (dasu) - Level: N5): Maps to "to take out, to put out, to send" and is used when Transitive verb. Used for taking something out, sending mail, or submitting something..
  • 浴びる (あびる (abiru) - Level: N4): Maps to "to take a shower/bath, to bask in" and is used when Transitive verb. Used for taking a shower.
Mixing these up can easily lead to unnatural translations. Refer to the bilingual context cards below to master the boundaries!
Context for "とる"
公園で写真を撮ります。
I take photos in the park.
Context for "出す"
かばんから財布を出しました。
I took my wallet out of my bag.
Context for "かかる"
東京まで3時間かかります。
It takes 3 hours to get to Tokyo.
Context for "だす"
ごみを外に出してください。
Please take out the trash.
Context for "浴びる"
毎日シャワーを浴びます。
I take a shower every day.

Synonym Mastery Challenge

Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?

Fill in the blank: "公園で写真を撮ります。" (Meaning: "I take photos in the park.")
🎉 Correct Answer!

Remember: "とる" is correct here because it represents "to take (a photo), to pick up, to get (a holiday)" in the context: "I take photos in the park.".

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