How do you say "hold" in Japanese?

In Japanese, "hold" is 持つ (motsu). It is a verb pronounced "moh-tsoo".

Listen to the pronunciation:

Pronunciation

持つ is written in kanji and hiragana. Romanised as motsu, it sounds roughly like "moh-tsoo" to an English ear.

Example sentence

私は持つことが好きです。

Watashi wa motsu koto ga suki desu.

I enjoy holding.

Usage notes

持つ means to hold in Japanese. This is an everyday verb that learners encounter early. Mastering its masu form (持ちます) and te-form opens up many sentence patterns.

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Questions about 持つ

How do you pronounce 持つ?

持つ is romanised as motsu. Say it roughly like "moh-tsoo" in English. Each Japanese syllable has even weight, so keep the rhythm steady.

Is 持つ formal or casual?

持つ is the plain (dictionary) form, used in casual speech and in dictionaries. For polite situations, verbs take a different ending, typically -masu. In Noun Town the game always shows the dictionary form.

How is 持つ written in Japanese?

持つ is written using kanji and hiragana. Kanji characters carry the core meaning; any hiragana or katakana that follow show grammatical endings.

This word is part of the vocabulary taught in the Japanese language learning game Noun Town, where words are introduced through play rather than memorisation.