Miyuri

Meaning of Miyuri

Miyuri, a Japanese appellation woven from 美 (mi, “beauty”) and 百合 (yuri, “lily”), drifts like a solitary blossom upon a moonlit pond, its syllables echoing ancient gardens where petals shimmer with dew. In its complex breath lies the unity of luminous grace and quiet resilience, conjuring a spirit that moves between shadow and shine with serene determination. Though still rare in American birth registers—bestowed upon eight newborns in 2024, gently rising from rank 951 in 2020—it unfolds across cultural landscapes like a delicate bud greeting the dawn. Its meaning, fluid with every chosen kanji, evokes the hush of spring rains and the soft glow of lanterns beneath cherry blossoms. To speak the name Miyuri is to invoke the ephemeral beauty of nature’s poetry, a timeless testament to purity, elegance, and the promise of new beginnings.

Pronunciation

Japanese

  • Pronunced as mee-YOO-ree (/miːˈjuːɾi/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Miyuri

Miyuri Samarasinghe -
Nora Watanabe
Curated byNora Watanabe

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