islamic ladies names
Explore 2,059 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.
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| Name | Meaning | Gender | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
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Mehtab
مهتاب — ضوء القمر (قوليًا)
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Moonlight; literally 'moon-shine' from Persian mah (moon) + tab (light, radiance). | Unisex | Persian-Urdu |
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Melik
ميليك: مشتق من المثلث العربي م-ل-ك عبر الاستخدام التركي؛ بمعنى الحاكم أو الملك.
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From the Arabic triliteral root M-L-K via Turkic adaptation; in Turkish/Anatolian usage Melik functions as 'sovereign' or 'king' — often preserved as a title-turned-name. | Boy | Turkic (via Arabic Malik) |
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Mayar
معيار (مِعیار، مِقْياس)
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Standard, benchmark; honor, esteem (from Persian/Urdu 'mayar' meaning measure or standard of quality) | Girl | Urdu, Persian |
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Mehrukh
مهرخ: مركب فارسي من مهر بمعنى الشمس أو المودة ورخ بمعنى الوجه، أي «ذات وجه مشرق»
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From Persian مهر (mehr) 'sun/affection' + رخ (rukh) 'face', meaning 'sun-faced' or 'one with a radiant/beautiful face' | Girl | Persian (adopted among South Asian Muslim communities) |
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Mahran
مهران: مشتق من الفارسية مهر بمعنى الشمس أو المودة، والمضاف -ان بمعنى «من مهر» أو مشبه بالشمس
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Derived from Persian مهر (mehr) 'sun' or 'affection' with the suffix -ān, meaning 'of Mehr', 'sunlike' or 'belonging to affection' | Boy | Persian (used among Persianate and Bengali Muslim communities) |
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Ma’shuq
معشوق
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Beloved, the loved one; derived from Arabic/Persian معشوق (maʿshūq) meaning 'object of love'. | Boy | Arabic/Persian (widely used in Persianate, Urdu, Pashto poetic registers and East African Muslim circles) |
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Mastura
مستورة: المغطاة، المحجبة، ذات الحَشْم
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From Arabic root S-T-R (ستر), meaning 'covered, protected, modest'; used historically in Muslim communities as a feminine name meaning 'the veiled/modest one'. | Girl | Arabic (widespread in Muslim societies, attested in South and Southeast Asian usage) |
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Habibullah
حَبِيبُ ٱللّٰهِ — محبوب الله
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Arabic compound name: Habib (حَبِيب) 'beloved' + Allah (الله) 'God' — 'Beloved of God'. Historically attested among South Asian and Horn of Africa Muslims and within Sufi-influenced families. | Boy | Arabic compound, attested in South Asia (Bengali, Urdu) and among Hadhrami and Somali communities |
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Mecnun
مجنون (دیوانہ، عشق میں دیوانہ)
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From Arabic majnūn (مَجْنُون) meaning 'possessed, mad, consumed (by love)'; in Turkish and Persianate literary tradition Mecnun denotes the archetypal lover (as in Qays ibn al-Mulawwah, called Majnun Layla). | Boy | Arabic (literary); attested in Turkish and Persianate literary traditions |
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Tijani
تيجاني / التيجاني — منسوب إلى التيجاني (المنسوب إلى الطريقة التجانية أو إلى الشيخ أحمد التيجاني)
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An Arabic nisba-style name (تيجاني/التيجاني) indicating association with the Tijaniyya or with the name/al- Nisba al-Tijani; historically attached to Sheikh Ahmad al-Tijani (founder of the Tijaniyya Sufi order) and to those associated with that tariqa. | Boy | Arabic / North African origin as a nisba; widely adopted across West African and Sufi communities, and found in the Swahili coast through Tijaniyya networks |