Residents of this country are forbidden from using these baby names: It can have a negative impact on a childs future

They’ve put the glitter in the gutter.Japan has officially cracked down on “kirakira” — meaning “shiny” or “glittery” — baby names, with a new law aimed at dimming the dazzle of outlandish monikers like Pikachu, Prince and, yes, Devil.Among the newly discouraged names? Jewel, Lovely, Kitty, Elsa, Prince, Naruto, Pikachu, Naiki (as in “Nike”), Pū (like Winnie-the-Pooh), Purin (like pudding), Daiya (meaning diamond), and Ōjisama (meaning prince), per the South China Morning Post.The crackdown, effective May 26, is part of a revision to the Family Register Act, giving local authorities power to reject any name they deem too outrageous or tricky to pronounce, originally reported on by Today.com.Why? To ensure names don’t have “a negative impact on a child’s future.”Blame it on one devilish dad.In 1994, Shigeru and Ayako Sato sparked national outrage when they named their newborn son Akuma — which translates to “Devil.” According to the South China Morning Post, the decades-long effort to ban kirakira names began with that headline-making hellraiser.Sato defended the diabolical decision at the time, telling the Los Angeles Times, “There will only be one Japanese (person) with this name.If you hear it once, you’ll never forget the name … It is the best possible name.”Spoiler: It wasn’t.

After officials initially approved the name, public backlash and a court battle forced the couple to swap it for something less infernal.Still, Sato wasn’t done dreaming big.He reportedly wanted to name a future son Teio — meaning “Emperor” — though he conceded he’d give a daughter “an ordinary, cute name.”Now, the Japanese government is making sure no one follows in his fire-stamped footsteps.And Japan isn’t the only nation reigning in rogue registrations.As the New York Post previously reported, New Zealand also has a list of forbidden names — and it’s royally strict.

King topped its recent list of banned baby names...

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Publisher: New York Post

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