turkish islamic name
| Name | Meaning | Gender | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Atabek
الأب الحاكم؛ الوصي الأمير
|
Father-lord; a noble title meaning 'father-ruler' or 'guardian ruler', historically used for senior military commanders and regent-tutors in Turkic-Islamic dynasties | Boy | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Sönmez
الذي لا ينطفئ؛ الشعلة الأبدية؛ رمز الإيمان الدائم الذي لا يخبو
|
The one who never extinguishes; the eternal, undying flame — symbolizing everlasting faith and spiritual resilience | Boy | Turkish (Turkic-Islamic) |
|
Ülgen
الإله السماوي الخيّر؛ النور الإلهي في التراث التركي الإسلامي
|
The divine, benevolent sky deity; in Turkic-Islamic synthesis, associated with divine light and heavenly grace | Boy | Turkish (Old Turkic / Turkic-Islamic) |
|
Nergis
زهرة النرجس، رمز الجمال والرقة والبهاء الروحي
|
Narcissus flower; a beautiful, luminous flower symbolizing grace and spiritual beauty | Girl | Turkish-Islamic (Persian-influenced) |
|
Tuncay
قمر البرونز، المضيء كالبرونز تحت ضوء القمر
|
Bronze moon; one who shines like bronze in the moonlight | Boy | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Ümit
الأمل، الرجاء، التوقع بالخير
|
Hope; aspiration; expectation of good | Unisex | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Sancaktar
حامل الراية، علمدار الجيش الإسلامي
|
Standard-bearer; one who carries the flag or banner, derived from Turkish 'sancak' (banner/flag) and '-tar' (bearer/holder), historically referring to the honored flag-bearer of an Islamic army | Boy | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Gülberay
وردة القمر، المضيئة كالقمر والجميلة كالوردة
|
Rose of the moon; derived from Turkish 'gül' (rose) and 'beray' (bright moon), symbolizing a woman of radiant beauty and gentle grace | Girl | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Ertaç
تاج الرجال، الفارس المتوَّج
|
One who is mature, complete, and virtuous; derived from Turkish 'er' (man, brave) and 'taç' (crown), meaning 'crown of men' or 'crowned warrior' | Boy | Turkish-Islamic |
|
Eyüp
أيوب — التائب الراجع إلى الله؛ النبي الصابر
|
One who returns to Allah; the Repentant; Turkish form of the Prophet Ayyūb (Job) | Boy | Turkish form of Arabic Ayyūb (أيوب), of Hebrew origin (Iyyōḇ) |