Japanese Culture - Naming - Cultural Atlas culturalatlas.sbs.com.au › japanese-culture › japanese-culture-naming
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Japanese names are usually written in kanji (Chinese characters), although some names use hiragana or even katakana, or a mixture of kanji and kana. · As ... Names from other ethnic... · Imperial names · Historical names · Professional names
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Japanese names are usually written in kanji (Chinese characters, see Kanji). Surnames are almost always in kanji. Given names are usually in kanji.
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Traditionally, Japanese girl names often end in “-ko” (子), “-ka”, “n-a”, or “-e,” while boy names end in “-rou”, “-o,” or “-hiko” (with some exceptions).
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24 Mar 2022 · Japanese names typically come after the surname, unlike the western countries. Example: If the name is Suniyo and the surname is Yamamoto, it'd ...
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In Japanese official documents, names are usually first written in Kanji (based on Chinese characters) followed by a phonetic spelling of the name in Katakana — ...
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30 Jul 2022 · In Japan, like in China and Korea, the first name follows the family name. A person with the first name "Ichiro" and the family name "Suzuki" is ...
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2 Jan 2020 · They will now be written in English in the same order as in Japanese | Asia.
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Japanese actually has 3 alphabets – Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. While Japanese names are written in Kanji, foreign names are written in Katakana. Foreign ...
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6 Sept 2019 · Traditionally, family names come first in Japanese, as they do in China and Korea. But beginning in the late 19th century, Japanese began ...
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As a general rule, surnames (名字 or “myoji” ie. family names) are written in kanji, as are most personal names (下の名 or “shita no na” ie.
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2 May 2012 · Foreign names are typically spelled out phonetically with katakana, so Chris becomes kurisu クリス ( ) , Sarah becomes seera セーラ ( ) , ...
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23 Apr 2021 · Japanese name order follows the East Asian style, putting the family name first and the given name second. For example, in the name Suzuki ...
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As a rule of thumb, in Japanese business life, the surname name is always followed by the honorific suffix “san” (meaning “dear” or actually “honorable Mr/Ms.”) ...
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In Japan, male and female given names can be written in hiragana so there is not a hard gender distinction. For non-Japanese names where the norm is to use ...
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