islamic ladies names Starting with S
Explore 132 Islamic names with meanings in Urdu and Arabic. Find unique Muslim boys and girls names, Quranic names, and modern Islamic names with lucky numbers and details.
Browse A to Z
Jump directly to names by starting letter.
List View
A clean comparison table for fast browsing across meaning, gender, and origin.
| Name | Meaning | Gender | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Setareh
نجمة
|
Star (Persian) | Girl | Persian |
|
Suqaynah
السكينة الصغيرة
|
A diminutive of 'sakinah' meaning 'little tranquility' or 'small serenity'; denotes calmness and composed presence. | Girl | Arabic (used in early Islamic and later Ottoman/Bosnian contexts) |
|
Sogand
قَسَم (قسْم)
|
Oath; solemn promise (from Persian 'سوگند') | Girl | Persian |
|
Saniyyah
سنيّة (مشتقة من سَنِيّ: عالي، رفيع، مشرق)
|
Eminent, lofty, resplendent; feminine form of Arabic sanī (سَنِيّ) meaning 'high, exalted, splendid.' | Girl | Arabic (used in Urdu and Bosnian naming traditions) |
|
Simin
فضّيّ (يشبه الفضة؛ من الفضة)
|
Silvery; made of silver; bright and lustrous | Girl | Persian |
|
Sanobar
صنوبر (تعني شجرة الصنوبر باللُغة الفارسية/الأردية)
|
Pine tree; specifically the pine (Pinus) — a tree-name used poetically | Girl | Persian / Urdu (used in South Asian Muslim literary naming) |
|
Subira
صابِرَة — من الجذر ص-ب-ر، بمعنى الصبر والتحمّل
|
Patient, persevering — Swahili female form derived from Arabic Sabira (صابرة), feminine passive participle related to sabr (صَبْر) meaning 'patience' or 'steadfastness'. | Girl | Swahili (from Arabic 'Sabira') |
|
Sepideh
الفجر — بزوغ الصباح
|
Dawn; the first light of morning (from Persian سپیده) | Girl | Persian |
|
Sahar Gul
زهرة الفجر (سحر = الفجر، گل = زهرة)
|
Dawn-flower; 'sahar' = dawn, 'gul' = flower (compound of Persian/Pashto origin meaning 'dawn flower') | Girl | Pashto/Persian compound in Afghan and broader Central/South Asian usage |
|
Shamsunnahar
شمس النهار
|
Sun of the Day (from Arabic 'Shams' = sun + 'al-Nahār' = the day) | Girl | Bengali Muslim usage (Arabic compound adopted into Bengali naming practice) |