Nahomi

Meaning of Nahomi

Nahomi is a quietly globetrotting cousin of the better-known Naomi, wearing two distinct passports at once. In Spanish-speaking circles, it is a phonetic tweak of the Hebrew biblical name and keeps Naomi’s gentle cadence—think “nah-HOH-mee”—along with the Book of Ruth’s associations of loyalty and renewal. In Japan, however, Nahomi can be written with kanji such as 奈穂美 or 菜保美, allowing parents to layer meanings like “apple blossom,” “grain ear,” or simply “beauty” onto the name; here the stress shifts slightly to “nah-HO-mee,” with the long Japanese “o.” Stateside statistics reveal a steady, if understated, presence: since 1990 the name has hovered in the mid-800s for girls, peaking at 838 in 2024—hardly headline material, yet proof of durable cross-cultural charm. For families seeking something familiar but not ubiquitous, Nahomi offers a neat linguistic double-play: a biblical echo for Sunday school, a tailored kanji story for the baby book, and just enough rarity to keep her monogram from getting mixed up at summer camp.

Pronunciation

Japanese

  • Pronunced as nah-HO-mee (/nɑhoːmi/)

Spanish

  • Pronunced as nah-HOH-mee (/naˈomi/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Nahomi

Nahomi Kawasumi -
Diana Michelle Redwood
Curated byDiana Michelle Redwood

Assistant Editor