Talk:Haruna/@comment-5975474-20180405065752/@comment-5975474-20180406013418

I don't think that's because of name. Well, Haruna (in this case) in Japanese is 榛名, 榛 is the name of a plant, 名 is just "name", they two clearly are nothing like Nayuki (in Nayuki Minase - 名雪水瀬). Besides, a mountain's name is neither masculine nor feminine. I got to think of something historically that fits her feminine and soft personality.