Strength: tsuyosa ツヨサ
Honor: meiyo メイヨ
The word katakana means "fragmentary kana" or "fragmented kana". Source: Wikipedia, Japanese to English Dictionary.
Using Katakana: ミカラ=Mikala in Japanese.
鴨 /ka mo/ is 'duck' in Japanese. It is also spelled with katakana: カモ.
pe tto or in katakana, "ペット"
Sheila is spelled シーラ in katakana.
hiragana katakana and kanji and furigana which is a mix of hiragana and katakana
Pooja would be spelled プージャ in Japanese katakana.
Non-Japanese names are written in 'katakana'. I wrote a nearly complete guide on how words are Japanized and spelled in katakana here:How_do_you_spell_in_katakana
The hardest Japanese Katakana character is often considered to be "ツ" (tsu) or "ソ" (so) for learners due to their similarity in appearance to other characters.
The word katakana means "fragmentary kana" or "fragmented kana". Source: Wikipedia, Japanese to English Dictionary.
"Saint Bride" in Japanese katakana is written as セント・ブライド. The word "Saint" is represented by セント (sento), and "Bride" is represented by ブライド (buraido). Katakana is typically used for foreign names and loanwords in Japanese.
Using Katakana: ミカラ=Mikala in Japanese.
In Katakana "サブタイトル”
hamu (katakana)
Hiragana is used for original Japanese words katakana is used for words that are not Japanese based so words like pen, basu, kurasu, geemu, sarada. ( pen, bus, class, game, salad) that sound like English use katakana also names that arent Japanese based have to be spelled in katakana
Originally Japanese names, are mostly written in kanji. Any names of foreign origin should be written in katakana. However every name written in katakana does not have to be foreign, Japanese names are also often written in katakana.
This is a Western name so thus has no REAL Japanese equivalent. That being said, you can probably find some converter on the net that can convert your name into Japanese, but also the letter "V" is hard to convert into katakana as there is no "V" in the Japanese language and thus must be represented by katakana only. Here is a wiki page that has all the katakana on it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katakana