Mai (name)

Mai is a name that is used as a given name and a surname.

Persons with the given name

  • Mai (Arabic name)
  • Mai, the title of Sayfawa dynasty kings of Chad
  • Mai (singer) (born 1984), formerly known as Ruppina, a J-Pop singer
  • Omai, also known as Mai, the first person from the Pacific Islands to visit Europe
  • Mai Atafo, a Nigerian fashion designer
  • Mai Charoenpura, a Thai pop singer from Bangkok
  • Mai Gehrke (born 1964), Danish mathematician
  • Mai Kadowaki, a Japanese voice actress
  • Mai Kolossova (born 1937), Estonian politician
  • Mai Kuraki (born 1982), a J-pop singer
  • Mai Hagiwara (born 1996), a J-pop singer under Hello! Project and a member of the Japanese band, Cute
  • Mai Hoshimura (born 1981), a J-pop singer under the Sony Music Japan label
  • Mai Ito (born 1984), a Japanese marathon runner
  • Mai Kondo (近藤 真衣, born 1992), Japanese ice hockey player
  • Mai Matsumuro, (born 1983), a Japanese singer, composer and a former member of J-pop girl band, Dream
  • Mai Mihara (三原 舞依, born 1999), Japanese figure skater
  • Mai Miyagi (宮城 舞, born 1988), Japanese model and television personality
  • Mai Mukaida (向田 麻衣, born 1982), Japanese make-up artist and businesswoman
  • Mai Murakami, Japanese artistic gymnast
  • Mai Narva (born 1999), Estonian chess player
  • Mai Shiraishi (born 1992) a Japanese idol group Nogizaka46
  • Mai Yamada, a Japanese actress
  • Mai Yamamoto (山本 麻衣, born 1999), Japanese women's basketball player
  • Mai Yamane, (born 1958), a Japanese English-language blues singer
  • Mai Zetterling, a Swedish actress and film director

Persons with the surname

Fictional characters

gollark: A 17x17 grid is small enough that you can probably get away with inefficiency, ubq.
gollark: I see.
gollark: Oops too many newlines.
gollark: Quoted from my notes:The relevant factors for course choice are probably something like this, vaguely in order: “personal fit” - how much I'll actually like it. This is quite hard to tell in advance. During the Y11 careers interview I was recommended some kind of trial thing for engineering, but I doubt that's on now, like many other things. Probably more important than other things, as I'd spend 3-5 years on said course, will perform better if I do enjoy it, and will probably not get much use out of studying a subject I would not like enough to do work related to. flexibility/generality - what options are opened by studying this stuff? Especially important in a changing and unpredictable world. how hard a subject is to learn out of university - relates to necessity of feedback from people who know it much better, specialized equipment needed, availability of good teaching resources, etc. Likely to decline over time due to the internet/modern information exchange systems and advancing technology making relevant equipment cheaper. earning potential - how much money does studying this bring? I don't think this is massively significant, it's probably outweighed by other things quite rapidly, but something to consider. Apparently high for quantitative and applied subjects. entry requirements - how likely I am to be able to study it. There are some things I probably cannot do at all now, such as medicine, but I didn't and don't really care about those, and there shouldn't be many. Most of the high-requirement stuff is seemingly available with more practical ones at less prestigious universities, which is probably fine.
gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/759121895022002206Well, yes, somewhat, BUT! There are other considerations™.

See also

  • Mai (disambiguation)
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