Hajizadeh is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Azari may refer to:
Haydar, also spelt Hajdar, Hayder, Heidar, Haider, Heydar, and other variants, is an Arabic male given name, also used as a surname, meaning "brave" and "lion". In Islamic tradition, the name is primarily associated with Ali ibn Abi Talib, the son-in-law and cousin of Muhammad, who was nicknamed "Haydar".
Abu'l Faḍl is an Arabic male given name which also occurs in place-names. It means father of virtue. It is variously transliterated as Abu'l-Fadl, Abu'l-Fazl, Abul Fazal etc. It is also used in Iran and Azerbaijan, usually in the form of Abolfazl, or Abulfaz.
Abdullayev or Abdullayeva is an Azerbaijani, Russian, and Central Asian surname, a variant of Abdulayev. It is shared by the following people:
Husseini is an Arabic surname.
Alizadeh is a surname built from Ali (name) and the Persian suffix zada. It may refer to:
Batmanghelidj, Batmanglij or Batmanghelidjh, is a Persian surname, and may refer to:
Sattar is a male Muslim given name and surname.
Nabiyev or Nabiev is a Russianized Turkic, Iranian (Tajik), and Caucasian (Dagestan) family name. It may refer to:
Sahar is either a feminine given name of Arabic origin, common throughout the Persian-speaking and Muslim worlds, or unisex given name of Hebrew origin, used mainly in Israel. Though the Arabic and Hebrew names are phonologically identical and both derive from Semitic languages, they are nonetheless etymologically unrelated. In Arabic, the name means "just before dawn", coming from a common Semitic root meaning "dawn". The origin of the Hebrew name is an ancient Akkadian word for the crescent moon.
Ajab is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Navabi is a Persian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
The Bayat tribe is one of the Oghuz tribes in Turkmenistan, Iran, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria. When Oghuz Turks started to migrate from the Aral steppes to Khorasan in the 11th and 13th centuries, Bayat people spread throughout the region. They are sub-ethnic groups of Turkmens, Turkish and Azerbaijanis. Bayats are Muslim and speak a southern dialect of Azerbaijani language in Azerbaijan and Iran, or their own dialect of Turkish in Turkey, and Ersari dialect of Turkmen in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. The ancient Turkmen proverb says: "Kayi and Bayat tribes shall lead the people".
Tahmasebi is an Iranian surname that may refer to
Qulizada is a surname built from Turkic quli and the Persian suffix -zada. It may refer to:
Kaif is a given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include:
Mahabadi is a Persian language surname which is also to be found among the Iranian diaspora. Notable people with the surname include:
Khosrowshahi is an Iranian surname. It is derived from Khosrowshah and the Khosrowshah District, areas in the East Azerbaijan Province of northwest Iran, which were in turn named after Khusrau Shah, king of the Justanids during the 10th century. The words "Khosrow" and "Shah" are both Iranian words that mean "king".
Abbaszadeh is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Husaynzada is a surname built from Husayn and the Persian suffix zada. Notable people with the surname include: