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Hala Al Turk (Arabic: حلا الترك; born May 15, 2002) is a Jordanian Bahraini [1] actress and singer. She became known for being a contestant on Arabs Got Talent in 2011. [ 2 ] Al Turk then released many singles, including "Bnayty El Habooba (2011)" featuring singer Mashael , for which she become a popular child singer.
[3] [4] [5] "Happy Happy" by Bahrani singer Hala Al Turk become the first Arabic music video to cross 100 million views. This is a list of the most-viewed Arabic music videos on YouTube . Top videos
The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. H. Hind (singer) R. Hanan Redha; T. Hala Al Turk
al-Turk or el-Turk and their variant casings, are portions of Arabic names, often adopted as a last name (or treated as such) in Western contexts. It may refer to: Hala Al Turk (born 2002), Bahraini child singer; Ishaq al-Turk (fl. 8th century), Persian religious leader; Ismail Fatah Al Turk (1934-2004), Iraqi artist; Mostapha al-Turk (born ...
The last film in the "High School Musical" trilogy, "High School Musical 3: Senior Year," turns 15 on Tuesday, and you know what that means: It's time to revisit — and rank — all 11 songs from ...
The song "I Love You Mummy" in the film was alleged to be a copy of an Arabic song "I Love You Mamma" by Hala Al Turk. Film director Siddique stated: Yes, the visuals are inspired from the Arabic song I Love You Mamma. However, the songs, their lyrics and music are entirely different; only the theme is the same ...
Al-Turk Production Musical artist Dounia Batma ( Arabic : دنيا بطمة ) (born 1 April 1991) is a Moroccan singer and actress who rose to popularity around the world as the runner-up of the first season of Arab Idol (the Arabic version of Pop Idol ) on MBC .
Three Songs to Poems by Thomas Hardy (1925), three poems set to music by John Ireland; Three Songs (Ireland, 1926), three poems by various poets set to music by John Ireland in 1926; 3 Strindbergsvisor for mixed choir a cappella (1959), Three Songs by Ingvar Lidholm; Three Songs (W. H. Davies); see List of compositions by Arthur Bliss