Japanese Name Converter - Read the Tea Leaves.
We use cookies to improve your experience on this website and so that ads you see online can be tailored to your online browsing interests. We use data about you for a number of purposes explained in the links below. By continuing to browse our site you agree to our use of data and cookies.
I and My in Japanese - Watashi, Atashi, Boku, Ore. There are many ways a person may refer to themselves in Japanese. Hopefully this page can help you sort out the various ways. Ways currently covered include: watashi, watakushi, atashi, atakushi, boku, and ore. Below this you will find out how to say My in Japanese.
Please click Phonetic to use Your name as Pronunciation. After insert English Phonetic of your name, Please convert Korean Alphabe to be read and write.
People sometimes ask me how I write my name in Japanese. Before I answer that a brief bit of background. If you're already familiar with the Japanese writing system you can skip this paragraph and the next. Japanese uses three sets of characters: katakana, hiragana, and kanji. Kanji are Chinese characters; they're not interesting when writing a non-Japanese name. Katakana and hiragana.
It is pardonable if you can't recognize your own name when it is written in Japanese script, unless your name is so mundanely simple as mine -- even a most clueless 2 years-old Texan can immediately write my name in my native alphabet and in Japanese script after just one time of showing him how. Foreign names and all English words can be written in Javanese the way they come -- i.e. no.
Basically, Kanji and Katakana are the options you can choose when converting a name into Japanese. You can use Hiragana as well, but Katakana is more suitable for converting foreign words into Japanese. Using Katakana. You can convert the name into Katakana based on the sounds of the name.
Write Like an Egyptian. Translate Your Name into Hieroglyphs (the way an Egyptian scribe might have written it!).