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139Dınmūhammed is a Kazakh masculine given name, formed by combining the Kazakh element dın meaning "religion" (traced back to Arabic dīn 'religion') with the name Mūhammed. As a theophoric compound, Dınmūhammed conveys the...
Eldar is a masculine given name used in several Turkic and Caucasus cultures, including Azerbaijani, Georgian, Kazakh, and Kyrgyz. It is derived from Turkic el meaning "country, society" combined with the Persian suffix...
Eldos (also transcribed as Yeldos) is a Kazakh male given name. It is a compound name formed from the Kazakh words ел (el) meaning "country, society" and дос (dos) meaning "friend," a word of Persian origin commonly used...
Erasyl is a Kazakh masculine given name formed from two elements: ер (er), meaning 'man' or 'hero', and асыл (asyl), meaning 'precious' or 'noble', thus conveying the overall meaning 'noble hero'. This type of compound s...
Erbol is a Kazakh masculine given name formed from elements that convey strength, virtue, and aspiration. The name combines er (ер), meaning "man" or "hero," with bolu (болу), the verb "to be" or "become." Thus, Erbol ca...
Erjan is a Kazakh masculine given name, serving as a cognate of the Turkish name Ercan. The name etymologically derives from Turkish er meaning "man, hero, brave" and can meaning "soul, life," conveying the combined sens...
Erlan is a masculine given name of Turkic origin, primarily used in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. It combines two Turkic elements: er, meaning "man," "hero," or "brave," and oglan, meaning "young man" or "boy." As a compoun...
Ernar is a masculine given name of Kazakh origin, composed of two elements: er meaning "man, hero" and nar meaning "camel", which is figuratively interpreted as "strong". Thus, the name conveys the combined sense of a "h...
Ernūr is a Kazakh masculine given name, composed of two elements: ер (er) meaning "man" or "hero," and нұр (nūr) meaning "light." The latter element derives from Arabic nūr (نور), a common component in Muslim names throu...
EtymologyErsūltan is a Kazakh masculine given name composed of two elements: er (ер), meaning "man" or "hero", and sūltan (сұлтан), meaning "sultan" or "king". The latter element is of Arabic origin, loaned into Kazakh v...
Erzhan is a Kazakh masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Kazakh Cyrillic Ержан (Erzhan). It is a cognate of the Turkish name Ercan, combining two Turkic roots: er meaning “man, hero, brave” and can (fro...
Hamza is a masculine given name of Arabic origin, derived from the root شن (حمز) meaning "strong" or "sturdy." The name directly translates to "lion," symbolizing strength, courage, and ferocity. It is widely used in the...
İbrahim is a Turkish, Azerbaijani, Kazakh, Tatar, and Bashkir form of Ibrahim, which ultimately derives from the patriarchal name Abraham. In the Islamic context, Ibrahīm is considered a prophet and a key figure in the Q...
Iliyas is the Kazakh form of Ilyas, which itself derives from the Arabic version of the biblical prophet Elijah. The name is used primarily in Kazakhstan and among Kazakh-speaking communities.The root name Elijah comes f...
İslam is a Turkish, Azerbaijani, and Kazakh masculine given name, derived directly from the name of the religion Islam. The underlying Arabic root ʾIslām means "submission (to God)," reflecting the core tenet of the Isla...
Ismail is the Arabic form of Ishmael, widely used across the Muslim world and in several other languages, including Bengali, Indonesian, and Urdu. The name derives from the Hebrew Yishmaʿel, meaning "God will hear," from...
Etymology and MeaningJalğas is a Kazakh masculine given name meaning "continuation" or "prolongation" in the Kazakh language. The name stems from the verb jalğasu (to continue), carrying a sense of ongoing progress or fu...
Jandos is a masculine given name of Kazakh origin, composed of two Persian-derived elements: jan (жан) meaning "soul" and dos (дос) meaning "friend". The name thus translates to "friend of the soul" or "soul friend", a p...
Karim (also spelled Kareem, Kerim, or Karem) is a masculine given name of Arabic origin, widely used across the Muslim world and beyond. Derived from the Arabic root كرم (karuma) meaning "to be generous," Karim signifies...
EtymologyKärım is a Kazakh masculine given name, formed as a transcription Karim, derived from the Arabic root كرم (karuma) meaning "to be generous." The literal meaning of the name is "generous" or "noble."Cultural and...
Khamza is an alternate transcription of the Kazakh Хамза, which is itself a form of the Arabic name Hamza. The name derives from the Arabic root (ḥamida) but Hamza itself is unrelated to that root; rather, Hamza means "l...
Kuanysh is an alternate transcription of the Kazakh masculine name Quanyş, derived from the Kazakh word meaning "joy." The name reflects a common practice in Kazakh and other Turkic naming traditions where positive abstr...
Mahmud is a male given name of Arabic origin, meaning "praised". It derives from the same triconsonantal root Ḥ-M-D (حمد) as Muhammad, which also means "praised, commendable". The name is widespread across the Islamic wo...
Makhmud is a Chechen form of Mahmud, as well as an alternate transcription of the Kazakh name. It shares its roots with the Arabic name Muhammad, derived from the triconsonantal root Ḥ-M-D, meaning “praise.” Etymology an...
Maqsat is the Kazakh form of Maksat, a name derived from Arabic maqṣid, meaning "goal, purpose, intention." The name reflects a shared cultural and linguistic heritage across Turkic-speaking regions, particularly within...
Marat is a male given name used primarily in Tatar, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, and Uzbek cultures. It is derived from the Arabic name Murad, which means "wish, desire" — a reflection of hope and aspiration. Over centuries, the name...
Miras is a masculine given name used primarily in Kazakhstan. It means "legacy, inheritance" in Kazakh, deriving from Arabic ميراث (mīrāth) [1] via Turkish. The name reflects a cultural emphasis on heritage and the passi...
Mūhamed is a Kazakh variant form of Muhammad, the name of the prophet and founder of Islam. In Kazakh, the name reflects a localized pronunciation and spelling, while maintaining the original meaning derived from the Ara...
Mūhammed is the Kazakh form of Muhammad, an Arabic name meaning "praised, commendable" derived from the root حمد (ḥamida), "to praise." As the name of the prophet who founded Islam in the 7th century, Muhammad is one of...
Mūhtar is the Kazakh form of Mukhtar, an Arabic-derived name meaning "chosen." In Kazakh, the name is written as Мұхтар, with the long vowel ū reflecting the phonetics of the language. The name is common among Kazakh Mus...
Mukhamed is an alternate transcription of the Kazakh name Mūhamed, which itself is a Kazakh variant of Muhammad, an Arabic name meaning “praised, commendable.” The underlying Arabic root is حمد (ḥamida), meaning “to prai...
Mukhammad is a variant form of the Arabic name Muhammad, used particularly in the Caucasus and former Soviet republics, as well as in Indonesia. It is the Russian-influenced transliteration of the name, reflecting Cyrill...
Mukhammed is a Kazakh alternate transcription of Мұхаммед (see Mūhammed), which itself is the Kazakh form of the Arabic name Muhammad. Meaning "praiseworthy" or "commendable" in Arabic, the name is derived from the ḥamid...
Mukhtar is a masculine given name derived from the Arabic word mukhtār (مختار), meaning "chosen" or "selected." The name shares its root with the verb اختار (ikhtāra), meaning "to choose," placing it within a semantic fi...
Mūsa is a Kazakh masculine given name, representing the local form of the Arabic name Musa. It is borne primarily in Kazakhstan and among the Kazakh diaspora. The name traces its ultimate origin to the biblical figure Mo...
Müslım is the Kazakh form of the name Muslim, ultimately derived from the Arabic triliteral root أسْلم (ʾaslama) meaning "to surrender, to submit." This root also gives rise to the word Islām, the religion of submission...
Mūstafa is the Kazakh form of Mustafa, an Arabic name meaning "chosen." The name derives from the Arabic root iṣṭafā ("to choose"), and it is traditionally used as an epithet of the Prophet Muhammad, emphasizing his stat...
Nūrasyl is a Kazakh masculine given name. It is a compound of two elements: нұр (nūr) meaning "light" and асыл (asyl) meaning "precious, noble." Both root words are ultimately of Arabic origin: nūr (نور) is a common comp...
Nūrdäulet is a masculine Kazakh given name, formed by combining the Arabic-origin elements nūr (نور), meaning "light," and däulet (دولة), meaning "country" or "government." In Kazakh, нұр (nūr) carries the sense of radia...
Nūrislam is a masculine Kazakh given name, composed of two elements: nūr (نۇر), meaning "light" (derived from Arabic nūr via ALA-LC romanization), and Islam (إسلام), the name of the Islamic faith. The name thus means "li...
Nūrjan is a masculine Kazakh given name formed from two elements: nūr (نۇر, from Arabic نور) meaning 'light', and jan (جان, from Persian جان) meaning 'soul'. The name therefore conveys the idea of 'light of the soul' or...
Nurlan is a Turkic masculine given name most common in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan. It is a variant form of Nūrlan, also serving as an alternate transcription of the Kazakh name. The name combines the Arabic e...
Nūrlan is a Kazakh masculine given name that signifies "bright boy" in the Kazakh language. It is a compound name derived from two distinct linguistic roots: the Arabic element nūr (نور), meaning "light," and the Turkic...
Nūrmūhammed is a Kazakh masculine given name formed by combining the Kazakh word нұр (nūr) meaning "light" — itself of Arabic origin — with the name Mūhammed, the local form of Muhammad. Thus, it can be interpreted as "l...
Nūrsūltan is a Kazakh masculine given name, composed of two elements borrowed from Arabic via Persian and Turkic languages. The first part, nūr (نور), means "light" or "radiance" and is a common theophoric element in Mus...
Nurzhan is an alternate transcription of Kazakh Нұржан (Nūrjan), a given name traditionally more common for males though used as unisex in some contexts. The name is a compound of two cultural and linguistic elements: th...
Oljas is a Kazakh masculine given name, also commonly spelled as Olzhas. The name is derived from the Kazakh word олжа (olja) meaning "plunder, spoils". This origin is rooted in the historical context of nomadic warrior...
Olzhas is a Kazakh masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Kazakh name Oljas. It derives from the Kazakh word olja, meaning "plunder, spoils" (from Arabic al-ghulūl via Persian). The name reflects a histo...
Omar 1 is an alternate transcription of Arabic عمر (see Umar). This spelling is the most common English rendering of the name, and it has a rich historical and cultural lineage across multiple regions and languages. Etym...
Oraz is a masculine given name used in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. It derives from the Persian word roze ( روزه ), meaning "fasting, Ramadan", and is akin to the Azerbaijani and Turkish names Oruc and Oruç. The name dir...
Qadyr is a Kazakh masculine given name, a form of Qadir. The name ultimately derives from the Arabic root q-d-r (قدر), meaning "to have power, to be able". It corresponds to both Qādir (قادر) and Qadīr (قدير), two Arabic...
Qanat is a Kazakh masculine given name meaning "wing" in the Kazakh language. The name is related to the Kyrgyz Kanat, which has the same meaning, reflecting the shared Turkic linguistic heritage of the Central Asian ste...
Quanyş is a masculine Kazakh given name meaning "joy".The name reflects a common onomastic tradition in Turkic languages, where names are derived from positive concepts and emotions to express good wishes for the child....
Ramazan is the form of Ramadan in several languages, including Azerbaijani, Kazakh, Turkish, Albanian, and Avar. Like the Arabic original, it is ultimately derived from the name of the ninth month of the Islamic calendar...
Rinat 1 is the Tatar, Bashkir, and Kazakh form of Renat, which itself is a Russian derivative of the Latin name Renatus, meaning “born again.” The name carries significant historical layers: Renatus was a Christian name...
Etymology Ruslan is a masculine given name used across multiple linguistic and cultural spheres, including Azerbaijani, Indonesian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Malay, Turkmen, Uzbek, Avar, Belarusian, Chechen, Ossetian, Russian, Tat...
Rustam is a variant form of Rostam in several languages, including Indonesian, Kazakh, Tajik, and Uzbek. The name derives from Persian legend, where Rostam is an iconic hero of Iranian mythology. The etymology of Rostam...
Samat is a male given name used in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Bashkortostan, and Tatarstan, derived as a local form of Samad, which means "eternal" in Arabic. The name reflects the influence of Islamic culture on Turkic nam...
Şämıl is a Kazakh form of Shamil, a name with Arabic origins. The meaning of Shamil is “comprehensive” or “universal,” derived from the Arabic root شَ مَ لَ (shamila), which signifies “to contain” or “to encompass.” This...
Sanjar is a Turkic given name, particularly common in Kazakh and Uzbek contexts. It derives from a Turkic root meaning "he who pierces" or "he who thrusts," evoking images of strength and martial prowess. The name's most...