A1 noun Neutral

目標

/mokɯçjoː/

A specific target or goal that a person or group intends to achieve. It is often used to describe concrete milestones in personal growth, sports, or professional settings.

Ejemplos

3 de 5
1

毎日、一時間日本語を勉強するのが目標です。

My goal is to study Japanese for one hour every day.

2

本日は、プロジェクトの最終目標についてお話しします。

Today, I will talk about the final goal of the project.

3

今年の目標、もう決めた?

Have you decided on your goal for this year yet?

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
目標
Verb
目標とする
Adverbio
目標通りに
Relacionado
目的
💡

Truco para recordar

Look at the kanji: 目 means 'eye' and 標 means 'signpost'. Think of it as the signpost your eye is focused on.

Quiz rápido

JLPTに合格するのが私の____です。

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: 目標

Ejemplos

1

毎日、一時間日本語を勉強するのが目標です。

everyday

My goal is to study Japanese for one hour every day.

2

本日は、プロジェクトの最終目標についてお話しします。

formal

Today, I will talk about the final goal of the project.

3

今年の目標、もう決めた?

informal

Have you decided on your goal for this year yet?

4

本研究の主な目標は、データの分析手法を確立することである。

academic

The main objective of this research is to establish a data analysis method.

5

今月の売上目標を達成するために努力しましょう。

business

Let's work hard to achieve this month's sales target.

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
目標
Verb
目標とする
Adverbio
目標通りに
Relacionado
目的

Colocaciones comunes

目標を立てる to set a goal
目標を達成する to achieve a goal
具体的な目標 a specific goal
高い目標 a high goal / ambitious target
目標に向かう to work toward a goal

Frases Comunes

目標を失う

to lose one's goal/direction

目標を掲げる

to set/announce a goal

目標に届く

to reach a target

Se confunde a menudo con

目標 vs 目的

Mokuteki (purpose) is the 'why' or the ultimate reason, while Mokuhyō (goal) is the 'what' or the specific milestone to reach.

📝

Notas de uso

Mokuhyō is used for measurable or tangible targets. It is very common in self-improvement contexts.

⚠️

Errores comunes

Learners often use 'mokuteki' when they mean a specific numerical target. Use 'mokuhyō' for things like 'losing 5kg' or 'passing a test'.

💡

Truco para recordar

Look at the kanji: 目 means 'eye' and 標 means 'signpost'. Think of it as the signpost your eye is focused on.

📖

Origen de la palabra

A compound of Chinese origin; 目 (eye) and 標 (mark/sign), signifying a visible mark to aim for.

Patrones gramaticales

Noun + を目標にする (To make something one's goal) Noun + が目標だ (The goal is [Noun])
🌍

Contexto cultural

In Japan, it is a common cultural practice for students and employees to write down their 'Slogan' or 'Mokuhyō' at the start of a new year or school term.

Quiz rápido

JLPTに合格するのが私の____です。

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: 目標

Frases relacionadas

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