Quintuple VS
Synonym Boundary: "かぶる", "かける", "履く", "おびる", "帯びる"
All represent the core concept "wear", but require precise selection.
Japanese Option A
かぶる
かぶる (kaburu)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option B
かける
かける (kakeru)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option C
履く
はく (haku)
N4 / CEFR
Japanese Option D
おびる
おびる (obiru)
N2 / CEFR
Japanese Option E
帯びる
おびる (obiru)
C1 / CEFR
Quintuple VS Nuance Contrast & Social Differences
When expressing "wear" in Japanese, you must carefully distinguish between "かぶる", "かける", "履く", "おびる", "帯びる" based on context.
- かぶる (かぶる (kaburu) - Level: N4): Maps to "to wear, to put on (on head)" and is used when Used for items worn on the head, such as hats, caps, or helmets..
- かける (かける (kakeru) - Level: N4): Maps to "to wear, to put on (glasses, certain accessories)" and is used when Used for items like glasses, masks, or scarves that are placed or 'hung' on the face or certain body parts..
- 履く (はく (haku) - Level: N4): Maps to "to wear (items on the lower body: shoes, socks, pants)" and is used when This verb is specifically used for clothing worn on the lower half of the body, such as shoes.
- おびる (おびる (obiru) - Level: N2): Maps to "to wear (a sword, etc.); to carry; to be tinged with; to be charged with; to have" and is used when Can mean physically carrying something.
- 帯びる (おびる (obiru) - Level: C1): Maps to "to wear, to have a trace of" and is used when Essential structural term in CEFR C1 vocabulary syllabus..
Context for "かぶる"
帽子をかぶって散歩に行きました。
I put on a hat and went for a walk.
Context for "かける"
私はいつも眼鏡をかけています。
I always wear glasses.
Context for "履く"
新しい靴を履いて出かけました。
I put on my new shoes and went out.
Context for "おびる"
彼はいつも笑顔を帯びている。
He always wears a smile. (He always has a smile on his face.)
Context for "帯びる"
毎日、日本語を練習するために帯びる。
Every day, I wear, to have a trace of to practice Japanese.
Synonym Mastery Challenge
Which Japanese word perfectly fits this blank space?
Fill in the blank: "帽子をかぶって散歩に行きました。" (Meaning: "I put on a hat and went for a walk.")
🎉 Correct Answer!
Remember: "かぶる" is correct here because it represents "to wear, to put on (on head)" in the context: "I put on a hat and went for a walk.".