Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Saki

Meaning — A Japanese feminine name written as 咲 meaning "to bloom" or "to blossom" — the intransitive verb of flowers opening, the action of a blossom coming into being. It can also be written as 沙希 (sand + hope) or 早紀 (early + chronicle). The blooming meaning is the most widely used: a name for a girl as a flower opening, a pure and direct image of natural joy.·Japanese origin·Gender-Neutral·SAH-kee

Saki Saki (咲, to bloom) is among Japan's most naturally beautiful name-images — not the flower itself but the act of opening, the verb rather than the noun. A character named Saki may be someone in the process of becoming, whose flowering is the arc of the narrative rather than the starting point. The name is warm and optimistic, carrying the inevitability of spring: given the right conditions, blooming is simply what happens.

Best genres for Saki

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionYoung AdultRomanceFamily Saga

Famous characters named Saki

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


Variations & nicknames

SakiSakiko

Pairs well with

Saki TanakaSaki WatanabeSaki NakamuraSaki SuzukiSaki HayashiSaki FujitaSaki KobayashiSaki Yamamoto

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Related names

Aoi

Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 葵 (hollyhock flower, the symbol of the Tokugawa shogunate) or 碧 (blue-green, the color of deep water or sky). The hollyhock (葵) is one of Japan's most venerable heraldic flowers — the triple-hollyhock crest (三つ葉葵) was the mon of the Tokugawa clan. The blue-green meaning evokes the color of the ocean between the horizon and the sky, a distinctly Japanese aesthetic color.

Hina

Japanese · “A Japanese feminine name written as 陽菜 (sunny/warm + greens/vegetables), 雛 (baby bird, chick) or simply with 日 (sun) and 菜 (greens). The name carries associations with the Hinamatsuri (Doll Festival, March 3rd) — Japan's traditional festival of dolls and girls' happiness — as well as with natural warmth, sunlight, and tender youth. Hina is consistently among the most popular girls' names in Japan.

Misaki

Japanese · “A Japanese feminine name written as 美咲 (beautiful + bloom), 岬 (cape/headland), or 美彩 (beautiful + colorful). The blooming meaning (美咲) is most popular for given names: a name of beautiful flowering. The headland meaning (岬) — a cape jutting into the sea — gives a more dramatic geographical character, suggesting the edge where land meets ocean, a place of exposure and perspective.

Rin

Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 凛 meaning "dignified", "cold and pure", or "having a crisp, cool quality" (as in the stillness of a cold morning), or 倫 meaning "ethics" or "logical order". The character 凛 evokes a particular aesthetic sensation: the sharpness of cold air, the clarity that comes with low temperature, a dignity that is both beautiful and somewhat formidable. Rin is used for both men and women.

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

Marina

As a Japanese given name, Marina is written phonetically in katakana (マリナ) or with kanji such as 真里奈 (true + village + what?/Nara) or 茉里奈 (jasmine + village + Nara). While the name has Latin origins (from mare, sea), in Japan it functions as an international-sounding feminine name popular since the 1980s. The name carries associations with the sea, internationalism, and a modern feminine aesthetic.

Riku

A Japanese masculine name written as 陸 meaning "land" or "continent" — the solid, fixed earth as opposed to the sea. Riku can also be written as 理久 (reason/logic + long time) or 力 (strength). The land meaning (陸) gives the name a grounded, reliable quality — land is where you can stand, build, and orient yourself. Riku is a popular modern boys' name in Japan.

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.

Koji

A Japanese masculine name written as 幸司 (happiness + administrator), 光二 (light + second son), or 浩二 (vast/wide + second son). The happiness-administrator meaning (幸司) suggests someone who manages or governs for the well-being of others. Koji is also the name of the mold (麹, Aspergillus oryzae) used to ferment sake, miso, and soy sauce — the invisible living culture that transforms raw ingredients into the foundations of Japanese cuisine.

Sakura

A Japanese feminine name written as 桜 meaning "cherry blossom" — the national flower of Japan, the subject of the spring blossom-viewing tradition (hanami), and perhaps the single most symbolically loaded natural image in Japanese culture. Cherry blossoms bloom for about two weeks and then fall all at once, making them the defining symbol of mono no aware: the bittersweet beauty of impermanence.

Nobu

A Japanese given name written as 信 meaning "trust", "faith", or "letter/message", or 延 meaning "to extend" or "to prolong". The trust/faith meaning (信) is one of the five Confucian virtues (alongside benevolence, righteousness, propriety, and wisdom), making it a name of ethical aspiration. Nobu is also a familiar short form of longer names like Nobuhiro, Nobuyuki, and Nobuyoshi.


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