Character Name
Sakura
Sakura Sakura (桜, cherry blossom) evokes mono no aware — the Japanese aesthetic of bittersweet transience — more purely than perhaps any other name. Cherry blossoms are beautiful because they fall; their perfection is inseparable from their brevity. Characters named Sakura carry this quality: they may be extraordinarily vital and beautiful in ways that suggest fragility, or their arc may follow the blossom pattern of spectacular flowering followed by release. The name is among Japan's most beloved for its layered cultural resonance.
Best genres for Sakura
Famous characters named Sakura
No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.
Variations & nicknames
Pairs well with
Writing a character named Sakura?
Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.
Related names
Saki
Japanese · “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.”
Haru
Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 春 meaning "spring" — the season of new beginnings, the first blooming of plum and then cherry blossoms, the return of warmth after winter. Spring in Japanese aesthetics is the season most saturated with feeling, when the landscape becomes briefly, achingly beautiful and then lets go. Haru can also be written as 晴 meaning "fair weather" or "clear sky".”
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.”
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.”
Yuki
Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 雪 meaning "snow" or 幸 meaning "happiness" or "good fortune". Snow (雪) is a central aesthetic image in Japanese literature, associated with purity, silence, and the transformation of the landscape. The happiness meaning (幸) is equally common and more straightforwardly positive. Yuki is used for both boys and girls — as a feminine name, 雪 (snow) is especially popular.”
More Japanese names
Hiroshi
“A Japanese masculine name written as 博 (broad/learned), 浩 (vast), or 寛 (broad-minded, generous). The suffix -shi (士 or 志) can indicate a gentleman or person of aspiration. Hiroshi was one of the most popular boys' names in Japan through the mid-twentieth century, strongly associated with the postwar era of reconstruction and the generation that built modern Japan.”
Haruka
“A Japanese feminine name written with kanji such as 遥 meaning "far away", "distant", or "faraway" — evoking longing across distance. It can also be written as 春花 (spring flower) or 晴香 (fragrance of clear weather). The meaning of distance (遥) is particularly evocative in Japanese aesthetics, where the yearning for something just out of reach is a core emotional register.”
Sora
“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.”
Aoi
“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.”
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.”
Mai
“A Japanese feminine name written as 舞 meaning "dance" or "to dance" — specifically the formal, aestheticized movement of traditional Japanese dance. It can also be written as 麻衣 (hemp garment), 真依 (true + reliance), or 毎 (every). The dancing meaning is the most poetically charged: Mai evokes the slow, deliberate, expressive dance form associated with Noh, Kabuki, and court performance.”
Explore more