Tsuki 月 also means moon (in fact, you can see the connection between moon and month).
It doesn't really mean 'love', it's more 'to like' even though it's not a verb on its own. Like, 'neko ga suki desu' 猫が好きです (I like cats). And for that reason, I very much doubt you'd find a Suki in Japan unless it's a nickname unrelated to their name, and even then, I wouldn't count on it.
Of course, you can find kanji that reads Suki, like 素貴 (which, according to Google, reads 'noble element').
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it's just textbook stuff it's in the abc of growing upThis message was edited 10/4/2010, 2:55 AM