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								| alfarez 
 
 
 Joined: 17 Nov 2006
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 2:37 am    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | thtl wrote: |  	  | 
 Does you own culture have names with no meaning?  Personally I doubted if there is a culture which has names with no meaning, however absurd the meaning may seem to us.
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 there are people in my culture has a name with no meaning. but MOSTLY there are name with meaning. my name actually has no meaning. but its pronounciation and spelling is very close to one term (religous term) which the term means "blessing". but in my language, there is no such term(my name) exists. Some people in my culture prefer to put name on their child based on their creativity. Sometimes the name mix between 2 cultures- losing its meaning. It seems like it evolve with time and modernization. Its better to have a name with meaning. I just use that term to express the meaning of my name.
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								| niko2x 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 3:04 am    Post subject: |    |   
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													not really. nowadays, japanese sometimes name their kids with western sounding names (maria, alice, nino, etc), altho it may have a meaning in the west, in jpn, it don't mean anything... 	  | alfarez wrote: |  	  | is every Japanese's name has a meaning? is it compulsory to put a Japanese name with meaning? are there Japanese's name with no meaning? | 
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								| Tu_triky 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 3:43 am    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | niko2x wrote: |  	  | not really. nowadays, japanese sometimes name their kids with western sounding names (maria, alice, nino, etc), altho it may have a meaning in the west, in jpn, it don't mean anything... | 
 
 interesting....
 
 isn't the meaning usually derived from the juxtaposition of kanji, that is if it's a japanese name to begin with....guess if you had a name that didn't have a kanji "spelling", so to speak, that would not apply.
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								| thtl 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 7:31 pm    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | alfarez wrote: |  	  | 
 there are people in my culture has a name with no meaning. but MOSTLY there are name with meaning. my name actually has no meaning. but its pronounciation and spelling is very close to one term (religous term) which the term means "blessing". but in my language, there is no such term(my name) exists. Some people in my culture prefer to put name on their child based on their creativity. Sometimes the name mix between 2 cultures- losing its meaning. It seems like it evolve with time and modernization. Its better to have a name with meaning. I just use that term to express the meaning of my name.
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 Live and learn, I suppose, and I stand corrected.
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								| thtl 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 7:35 pm    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | niko2x wrote: |  	  | not really. nowadays, japanese sometimes name their kids with western sounding names (maria, alice, nino, etc), altho it may have a meaning in the west, in jpn, it don't mean anything... | 
 
 In this case wouldn't the name takes on the meaning of its origin?  I suppose it is possible some Japanese parents uses a gaijin name because they like the sound of it, not because of its meaning.  Nevertheless my point is that the root of the name has a meaning.
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								| thtl 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 7:38 pm    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | Tu_triky wrote: |  	  | 
 interesting....
 
 isn't the meaning usually derived from the juxtaposition of kanji, that is if it's a japanese name to begin with....guess if you had a name that didn't have a kanji "spelling", so to speak, that would not apply.
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 Some Japanese uses the hiragana form even when the kanji form is available.  For instance Ishida Yuriko's name in Japanese is �Γc���q where ��� (meaning the flower Lily) can be written as �S�� in Kanji.
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								| thtl 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 7:47 pm    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | tabana wrote: |  	  | Like ayumi �����. 
 All names with kanji have meaning, when you check the meaning for each kanji separately. I don't know if they all have a meaning when you read all the kanji of a first name or last name.
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 According to my teacher all Kanji names (surnames and given names) have meanings.  Sometimes they can be rather strange, such as Abiko (Kanji = �䑷�q) meaning 'my grandson'.  My favourite artiste, Ms. Ueno Juri, given name is written in Kanji as ����, meaning a village or countryside full of trees.
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								| tabana 
 
  
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								| ~gshock99~ 
 
  
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								| ikadoodledoo 
 
 
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								| Shoy 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 1:36 am    Post subject: |    |   
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													 	  | ikadoodledoo wrote: |  	  | Hi, I just learned that my name (Richard) means "brave power" 
 any ideas how to translate it to japanese?
 
 the best I found was Isigayoku Chikara.
 
 but then again this is based on jdorama's dict.
 
 help guys!
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 brave = '�E' onyomi: yu. kunyomi: isamu
 power = '��' onyomi: riki, ryoku. kunyomi: chikara
 
 Yu-ryoku or Yu-riki sounds cool, although it's hard to find who has this Japanese name, because Yu is boy's/girl's name and Riki is also boy's name, and adding these two names makes kind of rare.
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								| Tenshigure 
 
  
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								| aishiterui426 
 
  
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											|  Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 9:02 pm    Post subject: |    |   
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								| aisya_chan 
 
  
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								| �P���B�� 
 
  
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								| suave_yamapi 
 
  
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								| suave_yamapi 
 
  
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