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

ジェームズ
james
Hepburn romanization, used to write foreign names in Japanese.

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.

継志
Tsugushi
tsugu
to inherit, to succeed, to carry on
shi
will, ambition, resolve

Together: 'one who inherits the will' — a direct nod to Jacob the supplanter, reframed as honorable succession of purpose.

follower 踵雄
Shōyū
shō / kakato
heel (echoing the Hebrew root 'aqev, heel)
hero, masculine, brave

Together: 'the heroic heel-follower' — etymologically literal yet recast as heroic pursuit.

堅忍
Kennin
ken
firm, solid, steadfast
nin
endurance, perseverance, forbearance

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.

邪夢頭
Jamuzu
ja
wicked, mischievous (playful villain energy)
mu
dream
zu
head, leader

Together: 'leader of mischievous dreams' — a cool, slightly chuuni rendering with a dark-fantasy flair.

蛇雨珠
Jaamuzu
ja
serpent (mystical, ancient)
a/me
rain
zu/tama
jewel, pearl

Together: 'serpent-rain jewel' — mystical and elemental, evoking a dragon-guardian's treasure.

慈恵夢厨
Jiemuzu
ji
compassion, mercy
e
blessing, grace
mu
dream
zu
kitchen, cook

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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