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I'm a little confused on the difference between 凍る 【こおる】 and 凍える 【こごえる】.

From what I've researched, it seems like 凍る focuses more on the physical process of something freezing, and the result being ice or frozen solid. Like water freezing into ice, or a steak freezing and becoming solid after it's been in the freezer for a while.

Whereas 凍える seems to be the more abstract concept of freezing, or the physical sensation of freezing. Like freezing toes/fingers when you're walking outside in the winter, or a "frozen wasteland".

Is this correct thinking, or am I off???

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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

I would agree with your general description: 凍る is physical freezing - usually of water or other liquid - or freezing cold. It is more objective (you can measure a freezing point). Exception: when used metaphorically as in 血{ち}も凍る which is probably close to the English "blood-curdling".

It can also be sometimes used when ice covers something e.g. 凍った[道]{みち} - a road that has iced over.

凍える is freezing in terms of feeling/your body's response as in "it's so cold I can't feel my fingers". It is more subjective. It can also be used to refer to parts of the body, e.g. 凍えた[指]{ゆび} - fingers stiff with cold.

So it makes more sense to talk about "凍る[温度]{おんど}" than "凍える温度", and I think it's possible to say 凍えるほど[寒]{さむ}い when the temperature isn't actually below freezing.

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凍るの意味は自分が凍るようにやること(例えば、他動詞の事) 凍えるは自動詞

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I don't think that's right. My dictionary shows 凍らせる if you want to use a 他動詞. 例: 水を凍らせる. It has plenty of examples for 凍る being 自動詞. – istrasci Aug 17 '11 at 4:18
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Your Japanese writing has many grammatical mistakes, and since you are discussing the details of Japanese with it, it is incomprehensible. You should not write the non-example part of your answer (or question) in Japanese. – sawa Aug 17 '11 at 5:02
You may want to expand on this answer... – summea Apr 12 at 21:44

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