Your name
James
in Japanese
The default way to write James in Japanese is ジェームズ — a phonetic katakana spelling that captures the sound and signals, instantly to a Japanese reader, that the name comes from elsewhere. But katakana is only one of three answers Japanese gives to a foreign name.
Below, we show all three. First the official katakana. Then a set of meaning kanji chosen to express what James actually means at the root — Derived from the Hebrew name Ya'aqov (Jacob), meaning 'supplanter' or 'one who follows / takes the heel'. Finally a set of ateji, the playful tradition where the kanji match the sound and tell their own small story underneath.
Katakana — Phonetic
How James is most commonly written in Japanese — used on official documents, business cards, and signage.
Meaning Kanji — Etymology
"James" means: Derived from the Hebrew name Ya'aqov (Jacob), meaning 'supplanter' or 'one who follows / takes the heel'. Traditionally associated with perseverance, succession, and quiet determination.
Together: 'one who inherits the will' — a direct nod to Jacob the supplanter, reframed as honorable succession of purpose.
Together: 'the heroic heel-follower' — etymologically literal yet recast as heroic pursuit.
Together: 'steadfast endurance' — capturing Jacob's lifelong perseverance through trials.
Ateji — Sound + Meaning
Where the sound matches and the kanji tell their own small story. The Edo scholars and modern manga authors both played this game.
Together: 'leader of mischievous dreams' — a cool, slightly chuuni rendering with a dark-fantasy flair.
Together: 'serpent-rain jewel' — mystical and elemental, evoking a dragon-guardian's treasure.
Together: 'a compassionate, blessing-dream cook' — cute and warm, like a kindhearted dream-chef from a Ghibli film.
Not sure which form to use?
Katakana, meaning kanji, and ateji each belong to a different part of Japanese life — official paperwork, calligraphy and gifts, signatures and wordplay. Our full guide walks through when to reach for each one.
Read the guide: the three ways to write your name in Japanese →
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