Amelia in Japanese

How do you write Amelia in Japanese? Below you will find the katakana, hiragana, and kanji renderings with a complete pronunciation guide.

Amelia in Katakana

アメリア

Katakana

Standard script for foreign names in Japan

Hiraganaあめりあ
RomajiAmelia
PronunciationAmelia

Amelia in Kanji — 3 Meaningful Options

These kanji combinations match the phonetic sound of Amelia while carrying beautiful Japanese meanings — a practice called ateji (当て字).

KanjiReadingMeaning
愛恵莉AmeliaLove · Blessing · Jasmine
AmeliaSky
AmeliaBright

How Amelia Sounds in Japanese

Amelia becomes アメリア (Ameria) in Japanese. The English "L" becomes the Japanese R-sound, and the "-ia" ending keeps its natural vowel pairing. The result is musical and internationally recognised.

Ameria flows well in Japanese with its five syllables forming a natural rise and fall. The name is associated with aviation history and romance in Japan, giving it an adventurous cultural resonance.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you write Amelia in Japanese?
Amelia is written アメリア in Japanese katakana — the standard script for all foreign names in Japan. In hiragana it is あめりあ, and the romanized pronunciation is Amelia.
How do you pronounce Amelia in Japanese?
In Japanese, Amelia is pronounced as "Amelia". Japanese vowels are always consistent: A = "ah", I = "ee", U = "oo", E = "eh", O = "oh". There are no silent letters.
What kanji can be used for Amelia?
Several kanji combinations can represent Amelia phonetically. For example: 愛恵莉 (Love · Blessing · Jasmine), 空 (Sky), 明 (Bright). These are chosen to match the sound while carrying a meaningful message.
Is Amelia a Japanese name?
Amelia is not a traditional Japanese name, but it can be written in Japanese katakana as アメリア. Foreign names are commonly written in katakana on official documents, business cards, and passports in Japan.

See how these popular names look in Japanese katakana and kanji.

Try the Full Japanese Name Converter

Enter any name and get katakana, hiragana, kanji suggestions, and a pronunciation guide — completely free.