Suroor may refer to:
Saeed Ahmed may refer to:
Ale is a fermented alcoholic beverage.
Ameen is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Darwish and Darvish are alternate transliterations of the Persian word "dervish", used in Arabic: درويش, referring to a Sufi aspirant. There is no v sound in most Modern Arabic dialects and so the originally Persian word is usually pronounced with a w sound in Arabic. The word appears as a surname in the Levant or for people descended from Levantine communities, particularly in Lebanon, Syria, Israel Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories. In Iraq, the surname, which in Arabic means "wandering, roaming", has been borne by people of Jewish descent as well.
Hilal is an Arabic word noun-name meaning "crescent moon", which is also used as a male given name, sometimes as a female given name.
Yusuf is a male Arabic, Urdu, Aramaic, Turkish and Persian name, meaning "God increases" in Hebrew. It is the Arabic equivalent of the Hebrew name Yosef and the English name Joseph. It is widely used in many parts of the world by Arabs of all Abrahamic religions, including Middle Eastern Jews, Arab Christians, and Muslims.
Mohamed Omer or Mohamed Omar may refer to:
Khamees is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Shahin or Shaheen, also spelt Chahine, is a Persian male given name which is the generic term for hawk or falcon, although in specific, the peregrine falcon. The name Shahin is a composite of two nouns, "shah" - king and "īn" - which is a sign of proportion, meaning "royal", literally "king of the birds". The name is sometimes used as a female name.
Khalil or Khaleel means friend and is a common male first name in the Middle East, North Africa, West Africa, East Africa, Central Asia and among Muslims in South Asia and as such is also a common surname. It is also used amongst Turkic peoples of Russia and African Americans. The female counterpart of this name is Khalila or Khaleela.
Hijazi, Hijazy, Hejazi or Hegazy is an Arabic surname originally designating a person from the Hejaz region in Saudi Arabia.
Suroor Barabankvi (1919–1980) was a Pakistani Urdu poet and lyricist. Born Syed Saeed ur Rehman, he wrote under the takhallusSuroor (exhilaration). He also directed three films, all in Urdu: Aakhri Station (1965) in East Pakistan, and Tum Mere Ho (1968) and Aashna (1970) in West Pakistan. He died in 1980 at Karachi, Pakistan. He also wrote some songs for Dhamaka film written by Ibn-e-Safi released in December 1974.
Sayegh is an Arabic surname which means goldsmith. Notable people with the surname include:
Mohammad, Mohammed, or Mohamed Ibrahim may refer to:
Ale Ahmad Suroor was an Urdu poet, critic and professor from India. He is best known for his literary criticism. In 1974 he was honoured with the Sahitya Akademi Award by the Government of India for his literary critic work, Nazar aur Nazariya. In 1991 he was also awarded the Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian award. He was awarded a special gold medal by the President of Pakistan on the centenary of the birth of Muhammad Iqbal.
Souhail, Suhail, Sohail or other variants is an Arabic term commonly used as a male given name and surname.
Bakheet, also transliterated Bakhet or Bakhit, and sometimes even Bekheet or Bekhit, and also sometimes preceded by Al- or El-, is an Arabic surname.
Ansari or Al Ansari is a typically Muslim surname mainly found in the Middle East and South Asia. People with the surname Al-Ansari or Ansari are said to be the descendants of the Ansar tribesmen of Medina. Notable Ansaris include:
Khatir or Khater may refer to:
Mutaz or Motaz or Moataz is an Arabic surname and given name.