This is a list of submitted names in which the usage is Arabic; and the first letter is A; and the ending sequence is a.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aabira عَابِرَة f ArabicMeans "fleeting, transient, passing by" or "interpreting" in Arabic.
Aafia عافية f Arabic, UrduAlternate transcription of Arabic عافية (see
Aafiya), as well as the Urdu form.
Aaila عائلة f ArabicDerived from the Arabic word عَائِلَة (
ʿāʾila) meaning "family".
Aara أرى f & m ArabicMeans "one who adorns, beautifier" in Arabic.
Aasia آسيا, آسية f Arabic, UrduAlternate transcription of Arabic آسيا or آسية or Urdu آسیہ (see
Asiya).
Abd al-Zahra عبد الزهراء m ArabicMeans "servant of Zahrah" from Arabic عبد ال
(ʿabd al) meaning "servant of the" combined with the given name
Zahra... [
more]
Abeira عَبِيْرَة f ArabicFrom the Arabic
عَبِير (ʕabīr) meaning "scent, perfume".
Abia أبيا, أبي f ArabicMeans "my father" in Arabic.
Abu Hanifa أبو حنيفة m Arabic (Rare)Combination of
Abu and حنيفة
(Ḥanīfa) of disputed meaning, possibly from a dialectal word meaning "inkpot" or from the feminine name
Hanifa... [
more]
Adeela عادلة f Arabic, UrduAlternate transcription of Arabic عادلة (see
Adila), as well as the Urdu form.
Adha أضحى m & f Arabic, Indonesian, MalayMeans "sacrifice" in Arabic. It is most often used to refer to the Islamic holiday Eid al-Adha, during which an animal sacrifice is made. In Indonesia, for example, it is sometimes used as a name for a child born on or around Eid al-Adha.
Ahya اية f ArabicAyah is a name referencing a verse in the Quran. An Ayah makes up chapters in the Surah.... [
more]
Aksa أقصى f & m Arabic, IndonesianAlternate transcription of Arabic أقصى (see
Aqsa), as well as the Indonesian (strictly masculine) form.
Al-'ala' m ArabicMeans "the exalted". Laqab of
Ala 1. This was the personal name of Abu Sa'd al-'Ala' ibn Sahl (c. 940–1000), a Muslim mathematician, physicist and optics engineer... [
more]
Aliraza m Arabicnamed after an important character in shia islam, Ali Al-Ridha
Alkhansa الخنساء f Arabic (Rare)From Arabic الخنساء
(al-Khansā), which is said to mean "the snub-nosed" or "the gazelle". This was the nickname of a 7th-century Arab poet who was a companion of the Prophet Muhammad... [
more]
Alqama علقمة m ArabicAlqama is an Arabic name for boys that refers to a fruit of a plant known al-ḥanẓal (known as bitter apple and desert gourd in English, scientific name Citrullus colocynthis). It is also used to mean “bitterness”.
Aqsa أقصى f & m Arabic, UrduMeans "furthest, most distant" in Arabic. It is taken from the name of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, considered the third holiest site in Islam as the Prophet
Muhammad travelled there during the Night Journey (Isra').
Asada أسد m ArabicFrom Arabic أسد ('asada) meaning "lion".
Ateia f Arabic“(All this will be) a reward from thy Sustainer, a gift in accordance with (His Own) reckoning (Quran 78:36)”... [
more]
Aziz un-Nisa عزيزالنساء f ArabicMeans "power of women" from
عزيز (
'aziz) meaning "powerful, respected" and
نساء (
nisa) meaning "women"
Azka أزكى f & m Arabic, Indonesian, UrduMeans "purer, more befitting, better" in Arabic, ultimately from the root زكا
(zakā) meaning "to be good or just, to be suitable". It is sometimes used as a masculine name in Indonesia, while it is solely feminine elsewhere.
Azza عَزَّة f ArabicPossibly meaning "young female gazelle", deriving from the Arabic word
azaza ("it was dear, it was expensive" referring to the difficulty in catching young gazelles).