少なさ
少なさ 30 सेकंड में
- 'Sukunasa' is the noun form of 'sukunai', meaning 'scarcity' or 'small quantity'.
- It is formed by replacing the final 'i' of the adjective with 'sa'.
- It is used to treat the concept of 'being few' as a measurable noun or topic.
- Common in formal, academic, and descriptive contexts to highlight lack or deficiency.
- Grammatical Function
- As a noun, it can function as the subject of a sentence, the object of a verb, or be modified by other nouns using the particle 'no'.
- Semantic Nuance
- It emphasizes the 'extent' of the smallness. It is often used when comparing expectations to reality, highlighting a deficiency.
この地域の雨の少なさが、深刻な問題になっています。(The scarcity of rain in this region has become a serious problem.)
参加者の少なさにがっかりしました。(I was disappointed by the small number of participants.)
- Comparison with -mi
- While some adjectives can take '-mi' (like 'kanashimi' for sadness), 'sukunai' almost exclusively takes '-sa' to denote the objective degree of fewness.
情報の少なさが判断を難しくしている。(The lack of information is making the judgment difficult.)
語彙の少なさを補うために、ジェスチャーを使った。(To compensate for the smallness of my vocabulary, I used gestures.)
- Common Collocations
- Often found with 'odoroku' (be surprised), 'nageku' (lament), or 'shiteki' (point out).
給料の少なさについて話し合った。(We discussed the smallness of our salaries.)
- Subject Marker (Ga)
- Used when 'sukunasa' is performing an action or being the primary focus of a state: 'Kazu no sukunasa ga kimeru' (The smallness of the number decides it).
- Object Marker (O)
- Used when someone is observing or affecting the scarcity: 'Kanshuu no sukunasa o mite, kare wa kanashinda' (Seeing the smallness of the audience, he felt sad).
その計画は、予算の少なさゆえに失敗した。(That plan failed because of the scarcity of the budget.)
間違いの少なさが、彼の仕事の質を証明している。(The fewness of mistakes proves the quality of his work.)
- With Adverbs
- You can modify the noun with adjectives like 'odoroku beki' (surprising): 'Odoroku beki kazu no sukunasa' (A surprising smallness of numbers).
経験の少なさを努力でカバーする。(To cover for the lack of experience with effort.)
チャンスの少なさを理解している。(I understand the scarcity of opportunities.)
- In Titles
- Often used in news headlines or paper titles: 'Shusseiritsu no sukunasa no gen'in' (Causes of the smallness of the birth rate).
荷物の少なさに驚いた。(I was surprised by how little luggage there was.)
- News Media
- Used to report on statistics like birth rates, voter turnout, or available jobs. It provides a formal tone.
- Academic Papers
- Essential for describing data trends. 'Sample no sukunasa' (The smallness of the sample size) is a common phrase in research limitations.
ニュースでは、若者の投票率の少なさが報じられた。(The news reported on the smallness of the youth voter turnout.)
このアプリの機能の少なさには不満があります。(I am dissatisfied with the small number of features in this app.)
- Workplace
- Used in performance reviews: 'Missu no sukunasa wa hyouka ni ataishimasu' (The smallness of your errors is worthy of praise).
冬の日の出の遅さと、昼の時間の少なさを実感する。(I feel the lateness of the sunrise and the smallness of daylight hours in winter.)
この店のメニューの少なさは、こだわりの証拠だ。(The smallness of this shop's menu is proof of their specialization.)
- Social Media
- People often post about 'folower no sukunasa' (small number of followers) in a self-deprecating or humorous way.
睡眠時間の少なさが肌に出ている。(The lack of sleep is showing on my skin.)
- Confusing -sa and -mi
- While '-sa' is for objective degree, '-mi' is for subjective feeling. However, 'sukunami' is not a standard word. Always use 'sukunasa'.
- Particle Errors
- Learners often forget the 'no' particle when connecting 'sukunasa' to another noun. It must be 'A no sukunasa', never 'A sukunasa'.
❌ 友達の少ないさが寂しい。
✅ 友達の少なさが寂しい。(The small number of friends makes me lonely.)
❌ 水の少なさをください。
✅ 水を少しください。(Please give me a little water.)
- Overcomplication
- Don't use 'sukunasa' when a simple negative verb will do. 'Hito ga inai' (There are no people) is often more natural than 'Hito no sukunasa ga hidoi'.
語彙の少なさを嘆いても始まらない。(It's no use lamenting the smallness of your vocabulary.)
間違いの少なさは自信につながる。(The fewness of mistakes leads to confidence.)
- Contextual Appropriateness
- In very casual speech, '-sa' forms are used less often than in descriptive or formal speech. Overusing it might make you sound like you're writing a report.
残高の少なさを見てため息をついた。(I sighed looking at the smallness of my balance.)
- Sukunasa vs. Fusoku
- 'Sukunasa' is the *state* of being few. 'Fusoku' is the *problem* of not having enough. You can have a 'sukunasa' of people that is actually a good thing, but 'fusoku' is always negative.
- Sukunasa vs. Mare
- 'Mare' (rare) refers to frequency or uniqueness. 'Sukunasa' refers to quantity. A rare diamond has 'mare' qualities, but the 'sukunasa' of diamonds makes them expensive.
ビタミンの不足(fusoku)は健康に悪いが、摂取量の少なさ(sukunasa)が原因だ。(Insufficiency of vitamins is bad for health, and the smallness of intake is the cause.)
この地域の人口の少なさは、交通の便の悪さが理由だ。(The smallness of the population in this area is due to poor transportation.)
- Comparison: Sukunasa vs. Mijikasya
- 'Sukunasa' for countable/uncountable volume. 'Mijikasya' for physical length or time duration.
資源の欠乏(ketsubou)は、争いの火種になる。(The dearth of resources becomes a spark for conflict.)
手間の少なさが、この料理の魅力だ。(The smallness of effort required is the charm of this dish.)
- Academic Alternative
- 'Kishousei' (scarcity) is specifically used in the context of supply and demand in economics.
情報の僅少(kinshou)さゆえ、推測するしかない。(Because of the extreme scarcity of information, we can only guess.)
How Formal Is It?
रोचक तथ्य
The kanji '少' is a pictograph representing four small grains of sand or dust, illustrating the concept of 'smallness' or 'fewness'.
उच्चारण मार्गदर्शिका
- Pronouncing the 'u' too strongly (it should be subtle).
- Stressing the wrong syllable like English 'su-KUN-asa'.
- Confusing the 'sa' suffix with 'sha'.
कठिनाई स्तर
The kanji is simple (JLPT N5), but the noun formation suffix -sa is an N4/A2 concept.
Requires understanding of how to drop the 'i' and attach 'sa' correctly.
Using it naturally as a topic instead of the adjective takes practice.
Easy to recognize if you know 'sukunai'.
आगे क्या सीखें
पूर्वापेक्षाएँ
आगे सीखें
उन्नत
ज़रूरी व्याकरण
Adjective to Noun with 〜さ
高い (takai) -> 高さ (takasa), 少ない (sukunai) -> 少なさ (sukunasa)
Noun + no + Noun
時間の少なさ (The scarcity of time)
Noun + ni + Emotion Verb
少なさに驚く (To be surprised by the scarcity)
Nominalization for Topics
少なさが問題だ (The scarcity is the problem)
Adverbial use of Sukunaku
少なくとも (At least)
स्तर के अनुसार उदाहरण
りんごの少なさにびっくりした。
I was surprised by the small number of apples.
Noun + no + sukunasa + ni + verb.
公園の人の少なさが好きです。
I like the fewness of people in the park.
The noun 'sukunasa' is the object of 'suki'.
本の少なさを心配しました。
I was worried about the small number of books.
'Sukunasa' followed by the object marker 'o'.
水の少なさが問題です。
The scarcity of water is the problem.
'Sukunasa' is the subject of the sentence.
お菓子の少なさに泣きました。
I cried because of the small amount of sweets.
Using 'ni' to show the cause of the emotion.
猫の少なさが寂しい。
The small number of cats is lonely.
'Sukunasa' used with the adjective 'sabishii'.
時間の少なさを感じます。
I feel the scarcity of time.
'Sukunasa' as the object of 'kanjiru' (to feel).
お金の少なさが悲しいです。
The smallness of my money is sad.
Simple subject-predicate structure.
この町のバスの少なさは不便だ。
The scarcity of buses in this town is inconvenient.
'Sukunasa' is the topic marked by 'wa'.
間違いの少なさを褒められた。
I was praised for the smallness of my mistakes.
Passive voice 'homerareta' used with 'sukunasa'.
砂糖の少なさに気づきました。
I noticed the small amount of sugar.
'Kizuiku' (to notice) takes the particle 'ni'.
参加者の少なさが残念でした。
The small number of participants was a pity.
'Zannen' (regret/pity) used to describe 'sukunasa'.
冬の日の少なさを知っています。
I know the smallness of daylight hours in winter.
'Hi' here refers to daylight/sun.
給料の少なさに驚いた。
I was surprised by the smallness of my salary.
Common collocation with 'odoroku'.
チャンスの少なさを理解した。
I understood the scarcity of opportunities.
'Rikai suru' (to understand) used with 'sukunasa'.
情報の少なさが不安です。
The lack of information is making me anxious.
'Fuan' (anxious) describing the state caused by 'sukunasa'.
この計画は予算の少なさがネックだ。
The scarcity of the budget is the bottleneck for this plan.
'Nekku' (bottleneck) is a common business katakana word.
若者の少なさが村の課題です。
The small number of young people is the village's challenge.
'Kadai' (challenge/issue) is a B1 level noun.
睡眠時間の少なさが健康に響く。
The lack of sleep affects one's health.
'Hibiku' (to affect/resonate) used here in a negative sense.
経験の少なさを努力で補う。
To compensate for the lack of experience with effort.
'Oginau' (to compensate/supplement) is a key B1 verb.
雨の少なさが農作に影響した。
The scarcity of rain affected the crops.
'Eikyou suru' (to influence/affect) is standard for this level.
語彙の少なさを痛感している。
I am keenly aware of the smallness of my vocabulary.
'Tsuukan suru' (to feel keenly) is a sophisticated B1 verb.
このアプリの機能の少なさに不満だ。
I am dissatisfied with the small number of features in this app.
'Fuman' (dissatisfaction) used with 'ni'.
ゴミの少なさがこの街の自慢だ。
The small amount of trash is this city's pride.
'Jiman' (pride/boast) describing the 'sukunasa'.
資料の少なさが、研究の限界を示している。
The scarcity of materials shows the limitations of the research.
'Genkai' (limit) and 'shimesu' (to show) are B2 academic terms.
資源の少なさを克服する技術が必要だ。
Technology to overcome the scarcity of resources is necessary.
'Kokufuku suru' (to overcome) is a strong B2 verb.
彼の感情の少なさは、時として誤解を招く。
His lack of emotion sometimes leads to misunderstandings.
'Maneku' (to invite/lead to) used with 'gokai' (misunderstanding).
この地域の雨の少なさは、異常気象のせいだ。
The scarcity of rain in this area is due to abnormal weather.
'Ijou kishou' (abnormal weather) and '...no sei' (due to).
情報の少なさが、パニックを引き起こした。
The scarcity of information caused a panic.
'Hikiokosu' (to cause/trigger) is a common B2 verb.
彼は自分の才能の少なさを嘆いている。
He is lamenting the smallness of his own talent.
'Nageku' (to lament) is a literary/formal verb.
この制度の利用者の少なさが指摘された。
The small number of users of this system was pointed out.
'Shiteki suru' (to point out) in passive form.
証拠の少なさが、裁判の行方を左右する。
The scarcity of evidence will influence the outcome of the trial.
'Sayuu suru' (to influence/sway) is a formal B2 expression.
日本における女性議員の少なさは、喫緊の課題だ。
The paucity of female lawmakers in Japan is an urgent issue.
'Kikkin no kadai' (urgent issue) is a high-level formal phrase.
歴史的文献の少なさが、真実の究明を阻んでいる。
The scarcity of historical documents is hindering the investigation of the truth.
'Kyuumei' (investigation) and 'habamu' (to hinder) are C1 verbs.
語彙の少なさが思考の幅を狭めている可能性がある。
There is a possibility that a small vocabulary is narrowing the scope of thought.
'Shikou no haba' (scope of thought) is an abstract C1 concept.
この映画のセリフの少なさが、観客の想像力を刺激する。
The fewness of lines in this movie stimulates the audience's imagination.
'Shigeki suru' (to stimulate) used with 'souzou-ryoku'.
供給の少なさが価格の高騰を招いている。
The scarcity of supply is leading to a surge in prices.
'Koutou' (surge/soar) is a C1 economic term.
バリエーションの少なさが、この製品の弱点である。
The lack of variation is the weakness of this product.
'Jakuten' (weakness) used in a formal 'dearu' style.
人口密度の少なさが、この土地の静寂を保っている。
The low population density maintains the silence of this land.
'Seijaku' (silence/stillness) and 'tamotsu' (to maintain).
選択肢の少なさが、彼を絶望させた。
The scarcity of options drove him to despair.
'Zetsubou saseru' (to cause to despair) is a strong emotional phrase.
史料の決定的な少なさが、その時代の解釈を困難にしている。
The decisive scarcity of historical records makes the interpretation of that era difficult.
'Ketteiteki' (decisive) and 'kaishaku' (interpretation) are C2 level.
表現の少なさが、かえってその詩の純粋さを際立たせている。
The fewness of expressions, on the contrary, highlights the purity of the poem.
'Kiwadataseru' (to make stand out/highlight) is a C2 literary verb.
サンプルの少なさに起因する誤差を考慮しなければならない。
Errors resulting from the smallness of the sample size must be considered.
'Kiin suru' (to result from) is highly technical/formal.
この論文は、先行研究の少なさを最大の難点としている。
This paper identifies the scarcity of previous research as its greatest difficulty.
'Senkou kenkyuu' (previous research) is a standard academic term.
彼の人徳の少なさが、周囲の離反を招いた。
His lack of personal virtue led to the defection of those around him.
'Jintoku' (personal virtue) and 'rihan' (defection) are advanced kanji terms.
情報の少なさがもたらす不確実性は、計り知れない。
The uncertainty brought about by the scarcity of information is immeasurable.
'Fukakujitsusei' (uncertainty) and 'hakarishirenai' (immeasurable).
情緒の少なさが、彼の文章を無機質なものにしている。
The lack of emotion makes his writing feel inorganic.
'Joucho' (emotion/sentiment) and 'mukishitsu' (inorganic/dry).
変数の少なさが、このモデルの精度を担保している。
The small number of variables guarantees the accuracy of this model.
'Hensuu' (variable) and 'tanpo suru' (to guarantee/secure).
सामान्य शब्द संयोजन
सामान्य वाक्यांश
— To be surprised by the smallness of something.
観客の少なさに驚いた。
— To lament or complain about the scarcity of something.
給料の少なさを嘆く。
— To point out the small number of something.
問題点の少なさを指摘する。
— The smallness of something is conspicuous/noticeable.
若者の少なさが目立つ。
— To cover/compensate for the lack of something.
人手の少なさをカバーする。
— Because of the scarcity of something.
情報の少なさが原因で失敗した。
— To truly feel/realize the scarcity of something.
体力の少なさを実感する。
— To be dissatisfied with the smallness of something.
手当の少なさに不満を持つ。
— The smallness of something is an advantage.
手間の少なさがメリットだ。
— To be proud of the smallness (e.g., mistakes).
ミスの少なさを誇る。
अक्सर इससे भ्रम होता है
'Sukoshi' is an adverb (a little bit). 'Sukunasa' is a noun (scarcity). You cannot use 'sukunasa' to modify a verb directly.
'Sukuname' means 'on the small/few side' and is used as an adjective or noun (e.g., 'Gohan wa sukuname de' - 'A small portion of rice, please').
'Fusoku' means a 'shortage' that causes a problem. 'Sukunasa' is just the 'state' of being few.
मुहावरे और अभिव्यक्तियाँ
— Literally 'sparrow's tears', meaning a very tiny amount. Often used with 'sukunasa'.
給料の少なさは雀の涙ほどだ。
Informal— Only as many as can be counted on one's fingers; very few.
チャンスの少なさは、数えるほどしかない。
Neutral— Literally 'as much as the dirt under a fingernail', meaning a tiny, insignificant amount.
彼の反省の少なさは、爪の垢ほどもない。
Informal— Tip of the iceberg. Used to say that the visible 'sukunasa' is only a part of a larger whole.
判明したミスの少なさは、氷山の一角だ。
Neutral— Literally 'cat's forehead', meaning a very small area.
庭の少なさ(狭さ)は猫の額のようだ。
Informal— A dirt-cheap price (reflecting the smallness of value).
価値の少なさゆえに二足三文で売った。
Informal— Water on a hot stone; an inadequate amount to help a situation.
この寄付の少なさは、焼け石に水だ。
Neutral— One hair from nine oxen; a very small part of a large whole.
私の知識の少なさは、彼に比べれば九牛の一毛だ。
Literaryआसानी से भ्रमित होने वाले
They share the same root.
'Sukunai' is an adjective (There are few). 'Sukunasa' is a noun (The fewness).
人が少ない (People are few). 人の少なさ (The fewness of people).
Both can describe 'smallness'.
'Semasa' is for physical area/space (narrowness). 'Sukunasa' is for count/quantity.
部屋の狭さ (The smallness of the room). 人の少なさ (The fewness of people).
Both can relate to 'little' amounts.
'Mijikasya' is for length or time duration. 'Sukunasa' is for quantity.
足の短さ (Shortness of legs). お金の少なさ (Smallness of money).
Both mean 'smallness'.
'Chiisasa' is for physical size/scale. 'Sukunasa' is for quantity/number.
箱の小ささ (The smallness of the box). チャンスの少なさ (The scarcity of chances).
Both describe things that aren't common.
'Mare' is an adjective for rarity/frequency. 'Sukunasa' is a noun for quantity.
稀な出来事 (A rare event). 出来事の少なさ (The fewness of events).
वाक्य संरचनाएँ
[Noun]の少なさに[Verb/Adj]
時間の少なさに困る。(I'm troubled by the lack of time.)
[Noun]の少なさが[Noun]だ
間違いの少なさが自慢だ。(The small number of mistakes is my pride.)
[Noun]の少なさを[Verb]
経験の少なさを補う。(To compensate for the lack of experience.)
[Noun]の少なさが原因で〜
予算の少なさが原因で中止した。(It was cancelled because of the small budget.)
[Noun]の少なさを指摘する
情報の少なさを指摘した。(I pointed out the lack of information.)
[Noun]の少なさに驚かされる
参加者の少なさに驚かされた。(I was surprised by the small number of participants.)
[Noun]の少なさが[Verb]を阻む
資料の少なさが研究を阻む。(The scarcity of materials hinders the research.)
[Noun]の少なさが〜を物語る
言葉の少なさが彼の怒りを物語る。(The fewness of words speaks volumes about his anger.)
शब्द परिवार
संज्ञा
क्रिया
विशेषण
संबंधित
इसे कैसे इस्तेमाल करें
Common in both spoken and written Japanese, especially when discussing problems or statistics.
-
水の少なさを飲む。
→
水を少し飲む。
'Sukunasa' is the abstract concept of scarcity, not a physical amount you can consume. Use 'sukoshi' (a little) to modify the verb 'drink'.
-
友達の少ないさが寂しい。
→
友達の少なさが寂しい。
When adding the suffix '-sa', you must drop the final 'i' from 'sukunai'. 'Sukunai-sa' is grammatically incorrect.
-
時間の少なさがあります。
→
時間が少ないです。
While 'sukunasa ga arimasu' is technically possible, it sounds very unnatural. Just use the adjective 'sukunai' to state existence.
-
少なさ人。
→
少ない人 / 人の少なさ。
'Sukunasa' is a noun and cannot modify another noun directly. Use the adjective 'sukunai' or use 'no' to connect them.
-
給料の少なさを不足している。
→
給料が不足している。
'Fusoku shite iru' (to be insufficient) is a verb. You don't 'insufficient' the 'scarcity'. You just say the thing itself is insufficient.
सुझाव
The -sa Rule
To turn any i-adjective into a noun, remove the final 'i' and add 'sa'. Sukunai -> Sukunasa. This works for almost all i-adjectives.
Focus on Degree
Use 'sukunasa' when you want to emphasize *how* few something is, rather than just stating that it is few.
Pair with Ni Odoroku
A very common pattern is '[Noun] no sukunasa ni odoroku' (to be surprised by the smallness of [Noun]). Memorize this as a set.
Academic Writing
In essays, use 'sukunasa' to nominalize your sentences. It makes your writing sound more objective and professional.
Expressing Dissatisfaction
Use 'sukunasa ni fuman ga aru' to politely express that you aren't happy with the small amount of something (like salary or portions).
The 'Sa' for Status
Think of the 'sa' suffix as standing for 'Status' or 'Scale'. It tells you the status/scale of the adjective.
Social Issues
When reading news about Japan's population, you will constantly see 'kodomo no sukunasa'. This is a key phrase for understanding social debates.
Sukunasa vs Oosa
Always remember 'sukunasa' (fewness) and its opposite 'oosa' (muchness/abundance). They are the two ends of the quantity scale.
Not an Adverb
Never use 'sukunasa' to mean 'a little bit' in a sentence like 'I want a little bit'. Use 'sukoshi' for that.
Listen for the 'No'
Because 'sukunasa' is a noun, it will almost always be preceded by 'no'. This 'no' is your cue that a descriptive noun is coming.
याद करें
स्मृति सहायक
'Suku' sounds like 'scoop'. If you only have a 'scoop' of rice, the 'sukunasa' (scarcity) will make you hungry.
दृश्य संबंध
Imagine a huge stadium with only three people sitting in it. The 'sukunasa' of the crowd is the main thing you see.
Word Web
चैलेंज
Try to use 'sukunasa' in three sentences today: one about time, one about people, and one about food.
शब्द की उत्पत्ति
Derived from the Old Japanese word 'suku' (few/small), which is the root of the modern adjective 'sukunai'. The suffix '-sa' is a classical Japanese nominalizer.
मूल अर्थ: The state of being insufficient or small in number.
Japonicसांस्कृतिक संदर्भ
When discussing the 'sukunasa' of people or money, be careful not to sound overly critical if the situation is sensitive.
English speakers often use 'lack' or 'shortage'. 'Sukunasa' is more like 'the degree of being few'.
असल ज़िंदगी में अभ्यास करें
वास्तविक संदर्भ
Economic Discussions
- 資源の少なさ (scarcity of resources)
- 供給の少なさ (scarcity of supply)
- 予算の少なさ (scarcity of budget)
- 求人の少なさ (scarcity of job offers)
Social Issues
- 子供の少なさ (small number of children)
- 若者の少なさ (small number of youth)
- 女性議員の少なさ (small number of female politicians)
- 医師の少なさ (scarcity of doctors)
Daily Life
- 時間の少なさ (scarcity of time)
- 荷物の少なさ (small amount of luggage)
- お金の少なさ (small amount of money)
- おかずの少なさ (small number of side dishes)
Evaluation/Feedback
- ミスの少なさ (small number of mistakes)
- 手間の少なさ (small amount of effort)
- 知識の少なさ (small amount of knowledge)
- 経験の少なさ (lack of experience)
Nature/Geography
- 雨の少なさ (scarcity of rain)
- 緑の少なさ (scarcity of greenery)
- 人口の少なさ (small population)
- 土地の少なさ (scarcity of land)
बातचीत की शुरुआत
"この辺りは、お店の少なさが不便だと思いませんか? (Don't you think the scarcity of shops around here is inconvenient?)"
"最近、自由な時間の少なさを感じていませんか? (Haven't you been feeling a lack of free time lately?)"
"このプロジェクトの予算の少なさをどう思いますか? (What do you think about the smallness of the budget for this project?)"
"間違いの少なさを褒められたことはありますか? (Have you ever been praised for having very few mistakes?)"
"海外に行って、日本の緑の少なさに驚いたことはありますか? (Have you ever been surprised by the lack of greenery in Japan after going abroad?)"
डायरी विषय
今日の忙しさと時間の少なさについて書いてください。 (Write about today's busyness and the scarcity of time.)
自分の語彙の少なさをどうやってカバーしていますか? (How do you compensate for the smallness of your vocabulary?)
最近驚いた「物の少なさ」について説明してください。 (Explain a 'smallness of things' that surprised you recently.)
もしお金の少なさが問題でなくなったら、何をしたいですか? (If the smallness of your money was no longer a problem, what would you want to do?)
日本の社会問題である「子供の少なさ」についてどう思いますか? (What do you think about the 'small number of children' in Japanese society?)
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल
10 सवालYes, 'hito no sukunasa' is a very common way to say 'the small number of people' or 'the small crowd'. It is often used to describe a quiet place or a poorly attended event.
'Sukunasa' focuses on the *degree* or *quality* of being few (scarcity). 'Sukunai koto' focuses on the *fact* that it is few. 'Sukunasa' sounds more like a measurable variable.
No, 'sukunami' is not a standard Japanese word. While some adjectives like 'tanoshimi' or 'kanashimi' use the '-mi' suffix, 'sukunai' only uses '-sa'.
You would say 'suimin jikan no sukunasa' (the smallness of sleep time). However, the more common and natural term is 'suimin-fusoku'.
Yes! For example, 'missu no sukunasa' (the fewness of mistakes) is a very positive thing to be praised for. 'Teman no sukunasa' (the small amount of effort/hassle) is also a positive feature of a product.
It is neutral to formal. It is used in daily conversation to describe things, but it is also very common in formal reports and academic writing.
No. 'Sukunasa' is a noun meaning 'scarcity'. You cannot eat 'scarcity'. You should say 'sukoshi taberu' (eat a little).
Usually 'ga' or 'wa'. For example, 'Sukunasa ga mondai da' (The scarcity is the problem).
Yes, you can say 'mizu no sukunasa' to mean 'the small amount of water' or 'the scarcity of water'.
'Jikan no sukunasa'. This is a very common phrase used when you feel busy or rushed.
खुद को परखो 180 सवाल
Translate: 'The small number of apples.'
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Translate: 'I was surprised by the scarcity of time.'
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Translate: 'The lack of sleep affects my health.'
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Translate: 'Point out the scarcity of information.'
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Translate: 'The paucity of female lawmakers is an issue.'
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Write 'scarcity' in Japanese (noun form of sukunai).
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Translate: 'The small number of mistakes was good.'
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Translate: 'Compensate for the lack of experience.'
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Translate: 'The scarcity of rain is abnormal.'
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Translate: 'The scarcity of supply leads to higher prices.'
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Translate: 'I like the fewness of people.'
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Translate: 'The smallness of the salary is a problem.'
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Translate: 'Keenly aware of the lack of vocabulary.'
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Translate: 'The scarcity of evidence influenced the trial.'
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Translate: 'The fewness of lines stimulates imagination.'
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Translate: 'Surprised by the scarcity of water.'
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Translate: 'The smallness of the town is nice.'
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Translate: 'The scarcity of young people in the village.'
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Translate: 'Overcome the scarcity of resources.'
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Translate: 'The paucity of documents hinders research.'
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Say 'The small number of cats' in Japanese.
Read this aloud:
तुमने कहा:
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Say 'I am surprised by the lack of time.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The lack of sleep is hard.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'I pointed out the scarcity of resources.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Discuss the scarcity of female politicians.
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'I like the quietness (fewness of people).'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The small salary is sad.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'Compensate with effort.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The small budget is a problem.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The scarcity of information caused panic.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'Few apples.' (Noun form)
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'I noticed the lack of sugar.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The scarcity of rain affected things.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The scarcity of evidence influenced it.'
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तुमने कहा:
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Say 'The scarcity of supply leads to surge.'
Read this aloud:
तुमने कहा:
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(Audio: Ringo no sukunasa ni odoroku) What is the person surprised by?
Ringo = apple.
(Audio: Jikan no sukunasa ga mondai da) What is the problem?
Jikan = time.
(Audio: Keiken no sukunasa o oginau) What is being supplemented?
Keiken = experience.
(Audio: Jouhou no sukunasa o shiteki shita) What was pointed out?
Jouhou = information.
(Audio: Josei giin no sukunasa wa kadai da) What is the 'kadai' (issue)?
Josei giin.
(Audio: Hito no sukunasa ga suki) Does the person like or dislike the crowd?
Hito no sukunasa = few people.
(Audio: Kyuuryou no sukunasa ni odoroku) How does the person feel about their pay?
Kyuuryou = salary.
(Audio: Ame no sukunasa ga eikyou shita) What caused the effect?
Ame = rain.
(Audio: Yosan no sukunasa ga nekku da) What is the 'neck' (bottleneck)?
Yosan = budget.
(Audio: Kyoukyuu no sukunasa ga koutou o maneku) What happens to prices?
Kyoukyuu = supply.
(Audio: Neko no sukunasa ga sabishii) Why is the person lonely?
Neko = cat.
(Audio: Machigai no sukunasa o hometa) Why was the person praised?
Machigai = mistake.
(Audio: Goi no sukunasa o tsuukan suru) What is the speaker feeling?
Goi = vocabulary.
(Audio: Shouko no sukunasa ga sayuu suru) What is swaying the trial?
Shouko = evidence.
(Audio: Habamu) What does this word imply?
Habamu.
/ 180 correct
Perfect score!
Summary
The word 'sukunasa' is essential for moving beyond simple adjectives to descriptive nouns. Use it when you want to focus on the *degree* of scarcity, such as in 'Jikan no sukunasa' (the scarcity of time).
- 'Sukunasa' is the noun form of 'sukunai', meaning 'scarcity' or 'small quantity'.
- It is formed by replacing the final 'i' of the adjective with 'sa'.
- It is used to treat the concept of 'being few' as a measurable noun or topic.
- Common in formal, academic, and descriptive contexts to highlight lack or deficiency.
The -sa Rule
To turn any i-adjective into a noun, remove the final 'i' and add 'sa'. Sukunai -> Sukunasa. This works for almost all i-adjectives.
Focus on Degree
Use 'sukunasa' when you want to emphasize *how* few something is, rather than just stating that it is few.
Pair with Ni Odoroku
A very common pattern is '[Noun] no sukunasa ni odoroku' (to be surprised by the smallness of [Noun]). Memorize this as a set.
Academic Writing
In essays, use 'sukunasa' to nominalize your sentences. It makes your writing sound more objective and professional.
संबंधित सामग्री
यह शब्द अन्य भाषाओं में
general के और शब्द
いくつか
B1An unspecified small number of things; some, a few.
ちょっと
A2थोड़ा; एक पल। अनुरोधों को विनम्र बनाने के लिए उपयोग किया जाता है।
すこし
A2A little; a few.
さっき
A2अभी-अभी; थोड़ी देर पहले।
能力
A1Nouryoku refers to the mental or physical power, skill, or capacity required to perform a specific task or function. It can describe both innate talent and skills acquired through learning and practice.
異常
A1A word used to describe something that deviates from the normal state, standard, or expected pattern. It often implies a problem, malfunction, or an extraordinary occurrence that requires attention or investigation.
~について
A2किसी विषय के बारे में बात करने या सोचने के लिए इस्तेमाल किया जाने वाला वाक्यांश।
〜について
B1एक वाक्यांश जिसका अर्थ 'के बारे में' या 'के विषय में' है।
~ぐらい
A2एक जापानी शब्द जिसका अर्थ है 'लगभग' या 'करीब-करीब' ।
ぐらい
A2लगभग दस मिनट लगेंगे। (लगभग 10 मिनट लगेंगे।)