I came across a website looking for Japanese names. There was one website I found had said Morii meant death, but I cannot find the website anymore and other websites say 'Shi' is the word for death (I know that in Latin 'Morir' means 'to die', but I prefer a Japanese name). I cannot find the meaning for Morii again anywhere. I found 'Mori' which means 'forest' but that is not what I am looking for. There are many Japanese people with the name Morii, but I still don't know what it means. Does Morii actually have a meaning? Just curious. Thank you for your help.
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Rotbuche2014-02-12T11:05:17Z
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According to my IME Software from Microsoft there are three versions of the name Morii in Japanese 森井, 森居, and 守井.
森井 The first kanji means forest (wood), the second one is the well. 森居 The first kanji means forest (wood), the second one means to be / to exist and is used for animate beings. 守井 The first kanji means to protect, the second one is the well again.
Rotbuche is absolutely right about the name "Mori". You can rely on his expertise.
Just to add a few things: I don't know how familiar you are with the Japanese language, but you need to know, that there are many homophones. Like "two, to and too" in the English language, there are even more words in the Japanese language, which sound the same, but have a different meaning and are written different.
That's why there's more than one way to write the name "Mori", with different signs.
"shi" indeed means "death", or is used in many compound words related to death. It's written with the kanji 死 then. But the spoken word "shi" does have more homophones like 四 meaning "four" in the English language, or 市 meaning "city".
Afaik, there's no spoken word "mori" related to death at all.
But you can look it up yourself, here: http://jisho.org/words?jap=shi&eng=&dict=edict http://jisho.org/words?jap=mori&eng=&dict=edict
Since "Morii" is just a transscription to the latin alphabet, the "double i" is used to indicate a different accentuation, than standard English suggests, but the Japanese language doesn't have letters in that sense, so there's nothing wrong in writing "Mori", as well as "Morii". Everything written with latin letters is just an appropriation on how it's pronounced.
I don't see how someone could come to idea that "mori" means death. Maybe it's a not so accurate translation of a Japanese movie-title, book or manga, which lead to this conclusion.
Btw, quite a lot of Japanese surnames - but surely not all - are comprised of only a bunch of common kanjis - here's a list: http://www.jref.com/japan/society/japanese_family_names.shtml
Avatars refer to a concept that is not any different at all from your "real" name as also only concept. This is a spiritual question because, in fact, there is nothing such as a You that exists. The You/Me/I which folks think they are is a linguistic convention for something that exists only in a dualistic consciousness. Importantly and ultimately, there is not a You and Your Life. There is not God except as your dualistic consciousness thinks one up. Knowing this or even just acting as if this were true changes behavior in a positive way. Thinking there is a God usually (not always) results in the worst kind of behavior because of the divisive delusion and ultimate arrogance it is based on. The practice of remembering and reminding one's "self" this is usually called religion in the broadest sense. Kshetra means a field of action and a holy place - sometimes site of a war - which affects consciousness in the way that physics describes reality. The World Trade Center Site in New York is one such Kshetra.