Rashid Khan (born 1998) is an Afghan cricketer.
Rashid Khan may also refer to:
Babar, also variously spelled as Baber, Babur, and Babor is a male given name of Persian origin, generally taken in reference to the Persian babr, meaning "tiger". It is the general name of the animal which is adopted in the Arabic. There is a similar name in connotation to the Arabic male given form and generic name of the animal by the name "Nimr" which means "yellow-black stripped cat", i.e. "tiger".
Rashid is the transliteration of two male given names: Arabic: راشد Rāshid and Arabic: رشيد Rashīd, both meaning 'rightly guided', 'having the true faith'. It also means 'the high one'.
Sher can refer to:
Zeeshan (Zişan) or Zeshan (Zeşan) is a Turkish given name, derived from words "Zee" (possessor of, from Arabic ذو) and "Shan" (high status or splendor, from Arabic شأن), sometimes simply translated as "princely" or "Moon". This word is also used in Persian, Urdu and sometimes in Turkish poetry as an adjective.
Haydar is an Arabic male given name, one of many names for "lion", each denoting some aspect of the animal, with "haydar" meaning "brave"; see Lions in Islam. In Islamic tradition, the name is primarily associated with the cousin of Muhammad, Ali, nicknamed "Haydar". It may also be used as a surname.
Khan is a surname deriving from the title khan, originating from the Central and Eastern Steppe during antiquity and popularized by pashtuns and Turkic dynasties in the rest of Asia during the medieval period. Used in the Rourans firstly, and also by the early rulers of Bulgaria, it was more widely spread by the Islamic chieftains in a wide region spanning from Turkey to the Indian subcontinent.
Ashish or Aashish is a male given name. This name is most common in India and Nepal. It literally means blessing from the elderly or from God or Aashirwaad (blessing) in Hindi.
Imran is an Arabic male name. In Turkish, İmran can also be a given name for females. The name Imran is found in the Quranic chapter called House of ʿImrān.
Iqbal Khan may refer to:
Kunwar is an Indian title denoting the prince.
Rana is an Indian name of Parsi and Hindi origin meaning "king" in South Asian languages and is the masculine derivative of the Sanskrit word "rānī" meaning "queen". It was commonly used as a princely title by the Nepalese Rana dynasty and by Rajput kings that ruled under a Maharana in the Indian subcontinent. It is today more commonly used as a surname or given name for males, especially in Mumbai, Gujarat and Rajasthan. Some other variants of the name include Rani and Ranee as well as the surname Rane, which is more common in Goa and Maharashtra.
Timur was a 14th-century Southern-Central Asian Turkic-Mongolian ruler and warlord also known as Tamerlane in the western world.
Abdul Rashid is a male Muslim given name, and in modern usage, surname. It is built from the Arabic words Abd, al- and Rashid. The name means "servant of the right-minded", Ar-Rashīd being one of the names of God in the Qur'an, which give rise to the Muslim theophoric names.
Sunil (सुनील) is a first name for males, often found in the South Asian community. The Sanskrit word sunīla means "dark", "very blue", and is also an epithet of Krishna.
Ali Khan may refer to:
Amjad Khan may refer to:
Haroon Rashid may refer to:
Imran Khan is the 22nd and incumbent prime minister of Pakistan, and former captain of the Pakistan national cricket team.
Sadiq is a male name. The most prominent bearer of the name is Ja'far al-Sadiq, the 8th-century Muslim scholar and scientist, considered as an Imam and founder of the Ja'fari school of jurisprudence by Twelver and Isma'ili Shi’as, and a major figure in the Hanafi and Maliki schools of Sunni jurisprudence, known at times simply as Sadiq.