Dajani or al-Dajani is a Middle Eastern surname. Notable people with this name include:
Haddad is an Arabic surname meaning blacksmith, commonly used in the Levant and Algeria.
Adham is an Arabic masculine given name meaning "intensity in the blackness," used to describe shiny black stallions. It's also use as a surname and has slavic origins where it translate to "son of the red earth". With time it became the diminutive of Adam and a city was born out of it in the Adam agglomeration in Saudi Arabia. People with the name include:
Masri, Masry or Al-Masri and El-Masry is an Arabic-language last name that literally means the Egyptian and may refer to;
Khoury, also transliterated as Khouri, is a Levantine surname that is found among Christians in the Middle East. The term Khoury means "priest" in Levantine Arabic. It derives from the Latin word curia, or may come from the French curé meaning parish Priest, from Medieval Latin curatus "one responsible for the care ," from Latin curatus, past participle of curare "to take care of".
Husseini is an Arabic surname.
Mubarak is an Arabic given name. A variant form is Baraka or Barack, analogous to the Hebrew verb "barakh" בָרַךּ, meaning "to kneel, bless", and derived from the concept of kneeling in prayer. The Arabic prefix m- is a passive participle prefix, meaning "who or which is blessed" (baraka). Mubarak is thus the Arabic equivalent of the Latinate name "Benedict".
Bushnak is a surname common among Levantines and Saudis (Hejazis) of Bosnian Muslim origin. Those sharing this surname are the descendants of Bosnian Muslims apprehensive of living under Christian rule after the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878, who immigrated to Ottoman Syria.
Najjar is an Arabic and Sephardic surname and profession meaning carpenter. Notable people with surnames Najjar, al-Najjar, or al-Najar include:
Fakhri or Fakhry or Fachri is an Arabic given name and surname. Fahri is the Turkish equivalent. Fakhri in the possessive form means "honorary, titulary". It may refer to:
Laith is an Arabic given name, a Hebrew surname, and a Scottish given name or surname.
Sayegh is an Arabic surname which means goldsmith. It has also some variants, like Saieg or Sayigh. Notable people with the surname include:
Fakhoury or variant Fakhouri or variants Al-Fakhoury, Al-Fakhouri, El-Fakhoury, or El-Fakhouri is an Arabic surname originating in Lebanon, with many people bearing the name being Palestinian or Jordanian.
Hourani also written Hawrani, Horani, Horany, Haurani, Howrani and Hurani is a common Levantine Arabic surname. Haurani is also a reference to inhabitants of Hauran, a region in southwestern Syria.
Faris is an Arabic masculine given name translating to "knight", "horseman" or "cavalier". It has also seen use as western-style surname.
The surname Alan is a variant spelling of Allan and Allen. According to one source, Alan is a variant of the English surname Allain.
Ḥanan (חנן) is a name of Biblical Hebrew origin which is also found in Qur'anic Arabic. In Hebrew, it is a masculine name meaning "gracious", "gracious gift" or "grace". In Arabic where it is used as a feminine name, it means "compassion" or "affection".
Daoudi is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Al-Shuaibi is an Arabic surname that denotes a relationship to Shuaib, a prophet of the Quran. Notable people with the surname include:
Asmar is a unisex given name and a surname which is mostly used by Muslims. It has two meaning: brown and a dark-skinned person.