Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Ayaka

Meaning — A Japanese feminine name written as 彩花 (colorful + flower) or 綾香 (colorful woven fabric + fragrance). The colorful-flower meaning (彩花) is the most direct — a name for a girl as a vivid, many-colored blossom. The woven fabric meaning (綾) refers to 綾 (aya), a type of silk with a diagonal weave pattern, whose surface catches light differently from different angles, creating iridescent effects.·Japanese origin·Gender-Neutral·ah-YAH-kah

Ayaka Ayaka written as 綾香 (iridescent silk + fragrance) names a character for a quality of shifting, multi-faceted beauty — like iridescent silk that reveals new colors as the light changes. Characters named Ayaka are often more complex than they first appear: the first impression does not exhaust them, and different observers see different things in them. The fragrance element adds a quality of subtle, permeating presence that remains after the person has left.

Best genres for Ayaka

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionYoung AdultRomanceHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Ayaka

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

AyakaAya

Pairs well with

Ayaka TanakaAyaka WatanabeAyaka NakamuraAyaka SuzukiAyaka HayashiAyaka FujitaAyaka KobayashiAyaka Yamamoto

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Related names

Hiro

Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 博 meaning "broad" or "learned" (identical to the Chinese character), 浩 meaning "vast" (of water or sky), or 大 (hiro) meaning "great". Hiro is also a short form of longer names such as Hiroshi, Hiroki, or Hiroto. The breadth meaning (博) connects to the ideal of encyclopedic learning; the vastness meaning (浩) evokes the open sea or sky.

Kota

Japanese · “A Japanese masculine name written as 康太 (peace/health + big), 光太 (light + big), or 幸太 (happiness/fortune + big). The ta (太) suffix conveys substance and vitality. Kota is a warm, grounded name — the ko element can mean peace, light, or happiness depending on the kanji, while the ta adds a quality of robust good health. It is a name that sounds both modern and traditionally Japanese.

Sora

Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 空 meaning "sky" or "emptiness/void" — the sky above, but also the Buddhist philosophical concept of shunyata (emptiness), the insight that all phenomena are without fixed, independent essence. The sky is the most open of spaces, the container that makes all other orientations possible. Sora is used for both boys and girls and has an ethereal, modern quality.

Taro

Japanese · “A Japanese masculine name meaning "first son" or "eldest son" — composed of ta (太, big/fat used in names for vitality) and ro (郎, son/young man). Taro is Japan's archetypal everyman name, appearing in the role that "John" plays in English — used in neutral examples the way a placeholder name would be. The folk hero Momotaro (Peach Boy) — born from a peach and destined to defeat demons — is the most celebrated Taro in Japanese legend.

Yui

Japanese · “A Japanese feminine name written as 結衣 (bind/connect + clothing), 結愛 (bind/connect + love), or 唯 (only/solely). The binding/connection character (結) gives the name an intimate relational meaning — a person who is a bond, who ties people or things together. 唯 (solely/only) expresses uniqueness and singularity. Yui has been one of Japan's most popular girls' names since the 2000s.


More Japanese names

Ichiro

A Japanese masculine name meaning "first son" — composed of ichi (一, one/first) and ro (郎, son/young man). The naming convention of -ro for sons (Ichiro = first son, Jiro = second son, Saburo = third son) was widespread in Japan through the early-to-mid twentieth century. Ichiro is a name of straightforward ordinal meaning: the eldest, the first, the one who inherits the most expectation.

Yuko

A Japanese feminine name written as 優子 (gentle/superior + child/young woman), 裕子 (abundant/prosperous + child), or 由子 (reason/cause + child). The -ko (子) suffix means "child" and was the most common suffix for Japanese girls' names through most of the twentieth century. 優子 is particularly elegant, as 優 means both "gentle" and "superior/excellent" — the paradox of excellence through gentleness.

Yuna

A Japanese feminine name written as 由那 (reason/cause + Nara), 柚那 (yuzu citrus + Nara), or 結菜 (bind + greens). The yuzu citrus writing (柚那) gives the name a fragrant, distinctive quality — yuzu is the aromatic citrus used in Japanese cuisine and winter bathing rituals (yuzu-yu). The binding-greens meaning connects Yuna to natural abundance. Yuna is also a popular Okinawan name, connecting it to the distinct culture of the Ryukyu Islands.

Megumi

A Japanese feminine name written as 恵 meaning "blessing", "grace", or "compassionate benefit" — the gift given from a position of care or abundance to someone in need. Megumi (恵) is very close in meaning to the Buddhist concept of jihi (compassion), and the name is associated with nurturing, generosity, and the warmth of someone who gives freely without calculation.

Sora

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Takashi

A Japanese masculine name written as 隆 (prosperous, lofty, elevated) or 孝 (filial piety, devotion to parents) — the suffix -shi (士, gentleman/person of learning). As 隆志, the name conveys lofty aspirations; as 孝史, it emphasizes the virtue of filial devotion, one of the foundational values of Japanese and Confucian ethics. Takashi was one of the most popular boys' names in Japan from the 1950s through the 1970s.


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