Your name

Olivia

in Japanese

The default way to write Olivia in Japanese is オリビア — 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 Olivia actually means at the root — Derived from Latin 'oliva' meaning 'olive' or 'olive tree', a symbol of peace, wisdom, and victory in classical traditions. Finally a set of ateji, the playful tradition where the kanji match the sound and tell their own small story underneath.

Katakana — Phonetic

オリビア
olivia
Hepburn romanization, used to write foreign names in Japanese.

How Olivia is most commonly written in Japanese — used on official documents, business cards, and signage.

Meaning Kanji — Etymology

"Olivia" means: Derived from Latin 'oliva' meaning 'olive' or 'olive tree', a symbol of peace, wisdom, and victory in classical traditions.

和実
Nagomi
wa/nagomu
peace, harmony
mi
fruit, truth

和 (wa/nagomu) = peace, harmony — echoing the olive branch as a symbol of peace; 実 (mi) = fruit, truth — representing the olive fruit and the bearing of meaningful results.

聖樹
Seiju
sei
sacred, holy
ju
tree

聖 (sei) = sacred, holy — reflecting the olive tree's sacred status in classical and biblical traditions; 樹 (ju) = tree — directly invoking the olive tree itself.

智穂
Chiho
chi
wisdom
ho
grain ear, harvest

智 (chi) = wisdom — drawing from the olive's association with Athena, goddess of wisdom; 穂 (ho) = grain ear, harvest — representing fruitfulness and the gifts of the olive tree.

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.

織璃亜
Oriria
ori
weaving, weaving fate
ri
lapis lazuli, glass-like jewel
a
second, Asia

Mystical: a name woven from threads of jeweled light.

桜里愛
Oria → Oriai (read as Oria)
o, from sakura
cherry blossom
ri
village, hometown
a, from ai
love

Cute: a beloved cherry-blossom village, soft and romantic.

央莉羽
Oriwa → Oria
o
center, the heart of things
ri
jasmine flower
a, from ha/wa
feather, wings

Cool: a graceful soul at the center, blooming with jasmine and taking flight.

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 →

Seven, drawn

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