LISmama810
Admin - CPS Technician
The other day I drove past a restaurant called Kokoro Sushi. (I don't eat sushi, but was SO tempted to go in, just because of the name.)
Anyway, it occurred to me that Coccoro/Kokoro probably means something in Japanese, since Combi is a Japanese company. I emailed the Combi rep to find out, and she said Coccoro means “Heart-felt, loved and cherished one.”
Isn't that a great name for a car seat (especially that one), that, afterall, is intended to protect our loved and cherished ones? Better than "Momentum," that's for sure.
I don't know enough about the intricacies of Japanese to know if Kokoro and Coccoro are the same word, just transliterated differently, but I'd guess that's a very cherished sushi restaurant, too.
Anyway, it occurred to me that Coccoro/Kokoro probably means something in Japanese, since Combi is a Japanese company. I emailed the Combi rep to find out, and she said Coccoro means “Heart-felt, loved and cherished one.”
Isn't that a great name for a car seat (especially that one), that, afterall, is intended to protect our loved and cherished ones? Better than "Momentum," that's for sure.
I don't know enough about the intricacies of Japanese to know if Kokoro and Coccoro are the same word, just transliterated differently, but I'd guess that's a very cherished sushi restaurant, too.