The common names of Japanese boys are Katsumura Yasuta, Kitahara Cangsuke, Ito Tuozhen, Yoshino Hideyoshi, Yoshioka Bangyan and so on.
1. Katsumura Yangtai: Katsumura is the surname, and Yang refers to sunshine, representing a bright future and cheerful personality. Too much meaning is the most extreme, and "Yangtai" means outstanding, far ahead and bright future.
2. Kitahara Cangjie: Kitahara is a surname, and Cangjie's original meaning refers to cyan, which is extended to be vigorous and powerful. It is a very masculine word. "Jie" means relying on, honest and frank, and "Cangjie" means upright and majestic.
3. Ito Tuozhen: Ito is a surname, which means pioneering, expanding and extending, which means being proactive and achieving something. Its true meaning means being true, sincere and simple, and it means being sincere to others. "Tuozhen" means being childlike and striving for progress.
4. Yoshino Hideyoshi: Yoshino is a surname, which means elite and excellent, and it is also a metaphor for literary talent. In ancient times, a scholar referred to a scholar-bureaucrat, which was extended to excellent and talented people. "Hideyoshi" means outstanding talents and outstanding talents.
5. Yasuhiko Yoshioka: This name is very philosophical and pleasant to listen to. You can look it up in the dictionary. The word "Yan" refers to a talented person, while the word "Yasuhiko" refers to an outstanding national talent.
Pronunciation of Japanese names
Pronunciation of Japanese surnames is so complicated that even the Japanese themselves can't fully understand it. The same pronunciation may correspond to dozens of Chinese characters, and the same group of Chinese characters may have several pronunciations, or even no rules at all. This may indirectly lead to the phenomenon that Japanese society is very dependent on business cards: the public needs romanization or pseudonyms on business cards to accurately read each other's names.
Take Suzuki, the second largest surname in Japan, as an example. There are also eight kinds of Suzuki, such as Shoushoumu and Bell Tree. The same Chinese character "Suzuki" has fourteen different pronunciations. Another classic example: "Takanashi" is pronounced as Takanashi, and the pronunciation and Chinese characters are completely incompatible.