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26 names in our directory
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26Aida is a feminine given name with multiple cultural origins, most famously popularized by Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida (1871). The name is a variant of Ayda, an Arabic name meaning "returning, visitor." In Turkey, Ayda i...
Alfia is a feminine given name found primarily in Tatar and Bashkir cultures. It is an alternate transcription of the Bashkir Әлфиә (see Älfiä) and the Tatar Әлфия (see Älfiya).The name's etymology is not entirely certai...
Älfiya is a Tatar feminine given name, representing a local cognate of the Bashkir name Älfiä. The name belongs to a family of names found across Turkic and Muslim-majority regions, including cognates such as Alfia (used...
Aliya is a feminine given name used in Arabic, Kyrgyz, Urdu, Uzbek, Tatar, and other languages with significant Muslim populations. It functions as the feminine form of Ali 1, a name meaning "lofty" or "sublime" in Arabi...
Alsu is a feminine given name of Tatar origin, meaning "pink" in the Tatar language. The name reflects a common Turkic naming tradition of using colors and natural elements as personal names, evoking beauty and delicacy....
Äminä is a Tatar and Bashkir transcription of the Arabic name Amina, itself derived from the Arabic root أمن (ʾamina) meaning "safe, secure." It denotes the revered mother of the Prophet Muhammad, who died when he was a...
Amina is a name of Arabic origin that, depending on its exact spelling, conveys meanings of trustworthiness, safety, and devotion. The name derives from the Arabic root أمن (ʾamina) meaning "safe, secure". It is associat...
Aygöl is a Bashkir and Tatar form of Aygül, a feminine given name of Turkic and Persian origin. The name is composed of the Turkic element ay meaning "moon" and the Persian word گل (gol) meaning "flower, rose". Thus, the...
Dinara is a feminine given name used primarily in Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uzbek, and Tatar cultures, as well as in other Muslim-majority regions. Its meaning is uncertain, but it is likely derived from the Arabic word dīnār (دين...
Elmira 2 is a feminine name used primarily in Turkic and Muslim-majority regions such as Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tatarstan. The name is likely derived from Turkic el meaning "country, society" combined wi...
Elwira is the Polish, Tatar, and Bashkir form of Elvira, a name with deep roots in medieval Iberian royalty and Gothic linguistic heritage. The name Elvira derives from the Visigothic name recorded in 10th-century Spain...
Färidä is the Tatar form of Farida, itself the feminine form of Farid, a name of Arabic origin meaning "unique, precious". It reflects a more precise transcription of the Arabic-derived sounds into the Tatar Cyrillic or...
Farida is a feminine given name derived from the Arabic root فرد (farada), meaning "to be unique, to be alone." It is the feminine form of Farid, which carries the meaning "unique, precious". The name is rarely seen in E...
Gölnara is a Tatar feminine given name, a regional form of the Persian name Golnar. The root name Golnar is composed of the Persian elements gol meaning "flower" and nār meaning "pomegranate", thus carrying the lyrical m...
Gölşat is a feminine given name used primarily among Tatar-speaking populations. It is the Bashkir and Tatar form of Gülşat, a name of Persian origin.EtymologyGülşat is derived from Persian elements: gol meaning "flower,...
Golshat is a feminine given name used primarily among the Tatar and Bashkir peoples. It is an alternate transcription of the Bashkir and Tatar name Gölşat, which in turn derives from the original Persian form Gülşat.Etym...
Gulnara is a feminine given name used across several Turkic and Caucasian cultures, including Azerbaijani, Georgian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, and Tatar. It is primarily a localized form or transcription of the Persian name Golnar...
Güzäl is a feminine given name in Tatar and Bashkir, meaning "beautiful." The name originates from the Turkic word güzel (modern Turkish) or gözel (Turkmen), both carrying the same aesthetic connotation. Linguistically,...
Märyam is the Tatar form of Maryam, which itself is the Arabic form of the Hebrew name Mary. In Tatar usage, Märyam is a feminine name that follows the region's linguistic conventions, reflecting the influence of Islam a...
Maryam is the Arabic, Indonesian, Persian, Urdu, and Tatar form of the biblical name Mary, itself derived from the Latin Maria and Greek Mariam, which ultimately come from the Hebrew Miryam. This name appears prominently...
Ralina is a female given name of Tatar origin whose exact meaning is unknown. It may be a modern variant or diminutive of names ending in or a creative coinage within Tatar naming traditions. Despite the lack of a clear...
Yosıf is the Tatar form of Joseph, a name with deep biblical roots. The name Joseph ultimately derives from the Hebrew Yosef, meaning "he will add" or "he will increase," from the root yasaf, "to add, to increase." In th...
Zemfira is a first name of uncertain etymology, possibly of Romani origin, famously introduced to literature by Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin in his narrative poem The Gypsies (1827). The name gained widespread recognit...
Zifa is a feminine Tatar and Bashkir name, derived as a form of Ziba, which means "beautiful" in Persian. The name reflects the cultural and linguistic influences of Persian on Turkic languages such as Tatar and Bashkir,...
Zöhrä is the Tatar and Bashkir form of Zohreh, a Persian name meaning "Venus (planet)". The name originates from Arabic al-Zuhara (الزهرة), derived from the root زهر (zahara) meaning "to shine". Etymology and Cultural Co...
Zukhra is a feminine given name primarily used in Uzbek and Tatar-speaking regions. It is a Russified form of Tatar Zöhrä, as well as a variant transcription of Zuxra. The name ultimately traces back to Persian Zohreh, m...