Sarah in Chinese
Get an authentic Chinese name for Sarah — one that echoes the sound of your name and carries real meaning, with pinyin, tones, and calligraphy.
Sarah in Chinese: the standard transliteration
莎拉
Shālā
If you look up Sarah in a Chinese newspaper or dictionary, you'll find 莎拉 (Shālā) — the standard transliteration used for foreign names in Chinese media.
It works for paperwork and news headlines, but it isn't a name: the characters are picked purely for sound, carry no intended meaning, and instantly read as "a foreigner" to native speakers. No Chinese parent would name a child 莎拉.
A real Chinese name keeps the echo of Sarah's sound but chooses characters for meaning, tone, and elegance — that's what InkName does.
How we name Sarah in Chinese
There's no single "correct" translation of Sarah into Chinese. A good Chinese name blends the sound of Sarah with characters that carry beautiful meaning — chosen the way Chinese parents actually choose names. InkName gives you three tasteful options, with the story behind every character, and never uses rare, awkward, or meme characters.
FAQ
What is Sarah in Chinese?
In Chinese media and news, Sarah is written 莎拉 (Shālā) — a standard phonetic transliteration. It mimics the sound of Sarah, but it isn't a name a Chinese person would actually carry. For everyday life, study, or work in Chinese, most people choose a real Chinese name instead.
Is 莎拉 a real Chinese name?
No. 莎拉 is a transliteration: its characters are chosen purely to imitate the sound of "Sarah" and are deliberately meaning-neutral, so it reads as "a foreigner's name" to native speakers. A real Chinese name uses one to two characters chosen for meaning, tone, and elegance — the way Chinese parents name their children.
How do I get an authentic Chinese name for Sarah?
InkName blends the sound of Sarah with characters that carry genuine meaning, checks tones and homophones, and avoids rare or awkward characters. You get three candidates free, each with pinyin, meaning, and a calligraphy card.