別格
意味
In a class of its own, exceptional, or on a completely different tier — describes something that stands apart from everything else.
Originally a Buddhist term meaning 'special rank' or 'outside the normal classification,' 別格 in modern casual usage means something is so good it cannot be compared to anything else. It implies not just being the best but being in an entirely separate category. It is used for food, people, performances, and experiences that transcend normal rankings.
例文
- あの店の寿司は別格だよ。
- 彼女の歌唱力はやっぱり別格だな。
- 本場で食べるナポリピザは別格だった。
使い方ガイド
場面: friends, reviews, social media, conversation
トーン: awestruck, reverential, definitive
正しい言い方
- やっぱりプロは別格だわ。 (Pros really are in a class of their own.)
- 別格の美味さだった。 (The taste was on another level entirely.)
避ける言い方
- 自分のことを「別格です」と言うのは傲慢 (Calling yourself 別格 comes across as extremely arrogant — it is for praising others)
よくある間違い
- Using 別格 for things that are merely good — it implies a gap so large that comparison is meaningless
- Confusing 別格 with 格別 (kakubetsu), which means 'exceptional' but without the 'separate tier' nuance
起源と歴史
From Buddhist temple ranking, where 別格 (bekkaku) designated temples of special status outside the normal hierarchy. The word entered general usage to mean something that transcends ordinary classification.
文化的背景
時代: Buddhist origins, widely used in modern casual speech
世代: All ages
社会的背景: Universal, slightly more refined tone than most slang
地域メモ: Used across Japan. The word retains a slightly elevated feel due to its Buddhist origins, making it feel more authoritative than casual alternatives.
関連フレーズ
フラッシュカード、クイズ、音声発音、間隔反復