Hirohito is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 1185 times.
From Japanese 大 (hiro) meaning "big, great" and è¼ (ki) meaning "brightness" or 樹 (ki) meaning "tree".
The name is of the meaning 'wise and straightforward'. A derivative of Hiromasa is the name Hyromasa. See also the related categories, wise and japanese. Hiromasa is unusual as a baby name for boys.
Meaning. Different meanings depending on the kanji used. Hiromichi (written: 煕通, åšé€š, å®å…¸, 弘é“, 広é“, 浩é“, 寛é“, å¯›ç† or åšé”) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Hiromichi Fuyuki (冬木 弘é“) (1960–2003), Japanese wrestler.
Different meanings depending on the kanji used. Hiromitsu is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Hiromitsu Agatsuma (born 1973), shamisen player. Hiromitsu "Hiro-x" Aoki, J-pop musical artist.
Hironori (written: 浩典, 浩徳, 浩得, åšç´€, å®ç¯„, 大徳 or 弘則) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Hironori Ishikawa (çŸ³å· å¤§å¾³) (born 1988), Japanese footballer.
From Japanese 寛 (hiroshi) meaning "tolerant, generous", 浩 (hiroshi) meaning "prosperous", or other kanji and kanji combinations which are read the same way.
Meaning of name Hiroto. Etymology : From Japanese (hiro) "large, great" or (hiro) "command, esteem" combined with (to) "soar, fly" or (to), which refers to the constellation Ursa Major. Saint : Origin : Japanese.
Hiroyuki (written: åšä¹‹, åšè¡Œ, åšå¹¸, 裕之, 裕幸, 洋之, æ´‹è¡Œ, 寛之, 寛幸, 寛å¾, 広之, 広幸, 弘之, 弘行, 弘幸, 弘介, å®ä¹‹, å®è¡Œ, å®å¹¸, 啓之, 浩之, 浩幸, ç¥å¾, 大由, å®ç”±æ¨¹, 弘å‹å¸Œ, ã²ã‚ゆã in hiragana or ヒãƒãƒ¦ã‚ in katakana) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Hiroyuki (artist) (ヒãƒãƒ¦ã‚, born 1982), Japanese manga artist.
Hirsch Name Meaning. German: from Middle High German hir(t)z 'deer', 'stag'; a metonymic occupational name for a keeper of deer, a nickname for someone thought to resemble a deer or stag, or a habitational name for someone who lived at a house distinguished by the sign of a stag.