Sahori

Meaning of Sahori

Sahori, a melodic gift from Japanese tradition, tiptoes onto the tongue like dew-kissed petals at sunrise. Its very syllables carry the gentle art of weaving—each note a ribbon drawn through a loom of lantern-lit tea gardens and cherry-blossom groves. Though still a rare blossom in American birth charts (fewer than a dozen little Sahoris arrive each year), it charms like a shy songbird perched on a bamboo branch. Pronounced sah-HO-ree, it flutters with the soft elegance of a flamenco fan, stirring un poquito de alegría in its wake. Warm and luminous, Sahori wraps any niña in a tapestry of grace—and might even trip over a stray tatami mat before giggling her way into your corazón.

Pronunciation

Japanese

  • Pronunced as sah-HO-ree (/sa.ho.ri/)

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Carmen Teresa Lopez
Curated byCarmen Teresa Lopez

Assistant Editor