
Baby name suggestion website compiles list of its users favorite names for they’re considering for their daughters.
Picking out a name for a baby is a huge decision, and that goes double for parents in Japan. The structure of the Japanese language, in which words are formed by combining kanji characters, means that there’s essentially a limitless number of possibilities when naming your child.
That’s where websites such as Akachan Natzuke (“Baby Naming”) come in, with lists of suggestions and rankings to help parens start narrowing down the impossibly large list of candidates. The site has recently released its list of the most popular girls’ names for 2017 and 2018 to-date, so let’s take a look at the top 10.
10. Rin (meaning: dignified)
9. Kei (meaning: blessing, mercy)
8. Kanna (meaning: guidance and pear)
7. Koharu (meaning: little sun)
6. Mio (meaning; waterway)
5. China (alternately Chia) (meaning: thousand loves)
4. Tsumugi (meaning: silk cloth)
3. Emika (meaning: blossoming flower)
2. Kokoro (meaning: cherry blossoms of the heart)
1. Nozomi (meaning: heart of hope)
Many of these names have a decidedly modern ring to them, and it seems like a lot of the two-kanji names are the result of parents picking out a character they want in their daughter’s name and then looking for another to give it an audibly pleasing ring, which accounts for the mentions of hearts, love, and sakura. Some of the top rankers though, like Kanna and Mio, instead seem to be a case of choosing a name based primarily on its sound, and then finding kanji to produce the desired reading.
Meanwhile, names ending in -ko (子, meaning “child”), once the most common naming convention for Japanese girls, are still sitting in the “too old-fashioned” penalty box, though Fumiko (文子, “cultured child”) and Yuko (裕子, “kind-hearted child”) did manage to make the top 30, at rans 19 and 28, respectively.
It’s worth noting that the rankings aren’t compiled from the number of baby girls who were given that name at birth over the past year, but by the number of times the entry for each name was accessed on Akachan Natzuke’s website. Still, all that interest is bound to trickle down, so elementary schools might be seeing an influx of Nozomis and Kokoros in a few years’ time.
Source: Akachan Natzuke
Top image: Pakutaso
Insert images ©SoraNews24
[ Read in Japanese ]











Japanese baby name app releases 2021 ranking of top ten most intriguing boy and girl baby names
Japan’s top 20 flowery names for baby girls: love, hearts, and dreams
The 10 most attractive Japanese women’s names, as chosen by dating app users
Kanji fail — Japanese parents shocked to learn their baby girl’s name has inappropriate meaning
Top 10 Japanese baby names of 2020 revealed
Japanese company selling bear-proof automatic doors
Viral 3D ice creams land in Japan… but are they worth the hype?
China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning seems to be affecting Osaka’s Namba and Dotonbori neighborhoods
Uniqlo Ukiyo-e Blue T-shirts: A cool-hued reinterpretation of some of Japan’s greatest paintings
Popular Japanese ramen restaurant Ichiran’s lucky bags are great value for money
Japanese convenience store chain has beer and sake dispensers that few people know about
The true identity of Cup Noodle’s “mystery meat”
Tsukiji Fish Market Vendor Releases Tuna For Home Assembly
Nintendo releases Metroid-shaped ice cube/cooking tray and Samus arm cannon pillow【Pics】
How to use Japan’s new self-checkout supermarket carts
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Nintendo’s Kirby now delivering orders at Kura Sushi restaurants, but not in Japan
Japan considering raising international traveler departure tax even more than previously reported
Is China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning affecting tourist crowds in Shibuya’s Don Quijote?
Is China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning affecting tourist crowd sizes in Nara?
Studio Ghibli stamps lift your spirits with motivational phrases from Totoro
Japanese town suing resident for being a jerk
Is Kyoto less crowded with tourists after China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning?【Photos】
You can now buy a Japanese train station clock in Japan
Japanese police attempting to clamp down on “zombie cigarettes”
Starbucks Japan unveils new Christmas goods and a rhinestone tumbler that costs 19,500 yen
Real-world Nausicaa Ghibli anime glider completes its final flight in Japan【Video】
Brand-new Pokémon park opens in Japan with larger-than-life-size Lapras【Photos】
Japanese train company is letting fans buy its actual ticket gates for their homes
Is China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning affecting tourist crowds in Tokyo’s Asakusa neighborhood?
The 10 best day trips from downtown Tokyo【Survey】
Naturally brown-haired Osaka student sues government for forcing her to dye her hair black
Japanese government considering tripling departure taxes to combat overtourism
Unique inclined elevator in Japan leads to a town that inspired Studio Ghibli’s Spirited Away
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s deadliest food claims more victims, but why do people keep eating it for New Year’s?
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
The top 10 annoying foreign tourist behaviors on trains, as chosen by Japanese people【Survey】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Starbucks Japan reveals new sakura drinkware collection, inspired by evening cherry blossoms
Top Japanese baby names for 2016 feature flowers and other flora on both boys’ and girls’ lists
The most popular Japanese baby names of the past 30 years, from Sakura to Shota
Top Japanese baby names for 2025 feature flowers, colors, and a first-time-ever favorite for girls
Japanese government will check and judge new baby name pronunciations, presents guidelines
Princesses, fruits, and blacksmiths: Study reveals the 30 most unusual family names in Japan
New wave of “creative” Japanese names read more like riddles
What does a kanji with 12 “kuchi” radicals mean? A look at weird, forgotten Japanese characters
Tokyo government announces new name for maternity/paternity leave, hopes to change attitudes
Four new era names the Japanese government rejected before deciding on Reiwa
Five different ways to say “children” in Japanese
Twitter users say Japanese Prime Minister’s name is hiding in the kanji for Japan’s new era name
The top 70 words that keep showing up in Japanese light novel titles (and yes, isekai is one of them)
Leave a Reply