Character Name
Shun
Shun Shun written as 瞬 (instant/blink) names a character for speed of perception — someone who grasps situations instantaneously, whose responses arrive before others have finished processing the question. This suits athletes, strategists, and the kind of intuitive intelligence that operates faster than conscious thought. Written as 俊 (talented/handsome), the name emphasizes the attractive brilliance that makes such characters both magnetic and slightly dangerous.
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Famous characters named Shun
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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.”
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".”
Kaito
Japanese · “A Japanese masculine name written as 海斗 (sea + the Big Dipper star constellation), 快斗 (cheerful + Big Dipper), or 偕斗 (together + Big Dipper). The Big Dipper (斗) is the navigational star that guides seafarers — combined with the sea character, Kaito evokes the image of a mariner steering by starlight. Kaito has been among Japan's most popular boys' names since the 1990s.”
Kana
Japanese · “A Japanese feminine name written as 奏 meaning "to play music" or "to present/report to a superior", 佳奈 (beautiful + Nara), or 花奈 (flower + Nara). The musical meaning (奏) gives the name an artistic, harmonious quality. Kana is also the name of Japan's phonetic writing systems (hiragana and katakana), giving the name an intimate connection with the Japanese language itself.”
Ren
Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 蓮 meaning "lotus" — the Buddhist symbol of purity emerging from muddy water, the flower on which enlightened beings are depicted sitting. Ren can also be written as 恋 meaning "love" or "longing", or 廉 meaning "honest" and "incorruptible". The lotus meaning is the most common and culturally resonant, connecting the name to Buddhist spirituality and the aesthetics of purity.”
More Japanese names
Kaede
“A Japanese given name written as 楓 meaning "maple tree" or "maple leaf". The maple (momiji when referring to the autumn-colored leaves) is one of Japan's most beloved trees, celebrated in the autumn leaf-viewing tradition (momijigari) that parallels the spring cherry-blossom viewing. Maple leaves turn vivid red and orange in autumn before falling — a symbol of brilliant transformation preceding release.”
Yui
“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.”
Kana
“A Japanese feminine name written as 奏 meaning "to play music" or "to present/report to a superior", 佳奈 (beautiful + Nara), or 花奈 (flower + Nara). The musical meaning (奏) gives the name an artistic, harmonious quality. Kana is also the name of Japan's phonetic writing systems (hiragana and katakana), giving the name an intimate connection with the Japanese language itself.”
Hiro
“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.”
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.”
Kenji
“A Japanese masculine name written as 健二 (healthy + second son), 賢二 (wise/intelligent + second son), or 謙二 (modest/humble + second son). The -ji (二) suffix traditionally marks the second son. The most culturally resonant writing is 賢治 (wise governance), which was the name of Miyazawa Kenji (1896–1933), Japan's beloved poet and author of Night on the Galactic Railroad.”
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