The Most Important Things That You Need To Know Before Getting Japanese Kanji Symbols For
Kanji Tattoo Designs by: Jun Yamamoto
The Most Important Things That You Need To Know Before Getting Japanese Kanji Symbols For Kanji Tattoo
Designs
Today, thousands of people from western countries such as USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and from most
of European countries have already some Japanese Kanji symbols tattooed into their skin. In other interesting cases, the Japanese
Kanji symbols are often placed on cards, cars, motorcycles, and other personal things to express their uniqueness. Most of
those people are eager to find a way of having one, or information about the Japanese Kanji symbols.
For those who
have considered themselves more unique than others, or who want to stand out from the crowd, having a tattoo designed with
the Japanese Kanji symbols seems to be one of the best solutions for them, because of the fact that the Japanese Kanji symbols
have three distinctive features; form, sound, and meaning. Kanji is a set of ideographic alphabets which represents concepts
and ideas, by which you can easily put your thoughts and ideas in the Kanji symbols used. This is why Kanji tattoos have gotten
so popular among unique people all over the world.
With a Kanji tattoo, you can express how unique and special you
are considering these features of Kanji symbols mentioned above. When having your name, a word or phrase translated into Kanji
symbols, therefore, it is extremely important to choose accurate and appropriate ones that convey the meaning you wish to
express with the Kanji tattoo.
Why am I saying this here? Because I have seen so many people who unfortunately have
wrongly-put Kanji symbols tattooed, or have them tattooed upside down in their skin! I really want you to avoid this kind
of situation. Also, beware of picking wrong Kanji symbols scattered across the Web, and some of the Japanese name generators
that you can access for free, which may only cost you in the end.
In order for you to avoid this situation, I would
strongly recommend consulting with a native speaker of Japanese who has a solid knowledge of the Japanese Kanji system. Based
on my research on this subject, Your-Name-In-Japanese.com would be the best solution to this. Mr. Ken Suzuki, the operator
of this site, is a native speaker of Japanese, and has been a reliable Japanese translator for many years. In case you decided
to create a Kanji tattoo on your own, it is always safer for you have a Japanese translator check the Kanji symbols you are
going to use, or consult a reliable resource like “The Image Dictionary of 500 Japanese Symbols for Creative People.”
Either way, just be sure to have the Kanji symbols that you are going to use for your tattoo checked by a professional
Japanese translator.
Jun Yamamoto
About The Author
Jun Yamamoto is a professional translator (from English to Japanese) for many years, and is based in
Tokyo, Japan. For more information about the article, please visit http://Your-Name-In-Japanese.com. |
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