Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Takumi

Meaning — A Japanese masculine name written as 巧 meaning "skillful", "clever", or "artisanal mastery", or 匠 meaning "craftsman", "artisan", or "master of a craft". Both characters celebrate the kind of excellence achieved through dedicated practice: the 職人 (shokunin) ideal of Japanese artisanship — the sushi chef who spends ten years learning to cook rice, the swordsmith whose entire identity is subsumed in their craft.·Japanese origin·Gender-Neutral·tah-KOO-mee

Takumi Takumi (匠, craftsman/artisan) names a character in the tradition of the Japanese shokunin — the master craftsperson whose entire identity is organized around the perfection of a single skill. This is not dilettantism or even extraordinary talent but decades of disciplined, single-minded devotion to the craft. A character named Takumi may be taciturn, perfectionist, and difficult to live with, but their work contains everything they cannot say in words.

Best genres for Takumi

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionHistorical FictionYoung AdultThriller

Famous characters named Takumi

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


Variations & nicknames

TakumiTaku

Pairs well with

Takumi TanakaTakumi WatanabeTakumi NakamuraTakumi SuzukiTakumi HayashiTakumi FujitaTakumi KobayashiTakumi Yamamoto

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Related names

Kenji

Japanese · “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.

Mai

Japanese · “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.

Makoto

Japanese · “A Japanese given name written as 誠 meaning "sincerity", "honesty", or "wholehearted truthfulness" — one of the highest virtues in Japanese ethics. Makoto (誠) is the quality of being genuine, of saying what you mean and meaning what you say, with no gap between inner feeling and outer expression. The Confucian virtue of cheng (誠) was adopted into Japanese ethics and became central to both samurai codes and modern Japanese ideas of integrity.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Ryo

A Japanese given name written as 涼 meaning "cool" or "refreshing" (as in a cool breeze on a hot day), 良 meaning "good" or "excellent", or 遼 meaning "far away" or "vast". The cool/refreshing meaning (涼) is distinctly Japanese in its appreciation for the particular pleasure of freshness against heat. 良 is a virtue-name meaning simple, unqualified goodness.

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.


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