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Why JLPT N3 learners mix up 微妙 (びみょう, “delicate, subtle”) and 単純 (たんじゅん, “simplicity”).
These are near-antonyms for complexity. 微妙 (delicate/subtle, using 微 for tiny) describes something "hard to judge," while 単純 (simple) describes something "easy," leading to confusion between these common evaluative terms.
On JLPT N3, this pair shows up as a vocabulary meaning question. You see one word and pick its English equivalent from four options — one of which will be the other word in this pair, chosen as a distractor precisely because of the overlap.
Reading the explanation is step one. Targeted practice is what actually moves a confusion pair out of your weak list. Free, no signup needed to try.
Practice N3 confusion pairsSpot a mistake in this explanation? Email us. Explanations are AI-generated and human-reviewed; corrections welcome.