Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hala (Arabic: هالة) is an Arabic female given name meaning "the aura of light around the moon". It is a cognate of the Hebrew name Hila. Notable people with the name include: Hala Finley (born 2009), American actress
Halah (Arabic: هالة), as an Arabic name is female. It is also a Hebrew name. Halah as a given name or a surname can be associated with: Halah binte Wahab, one of Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim's wives; Halah bint Khuwailid, the sister of Muhammad's first wife; Other uses: Halah, the city "Halah", a single by Mazzy Star from their first album ...
Hala (given name), a female given name (including a list of people and fictional characters with the name) David Hala (born 1989), Australian Rugby League player; Hāla (fl. 20-24), Indian king of the Satavahana dynasty; Hala Bashi, Uyghur Muslim general of the Ming dynasty and its Hongwu Emperor; Jiří Hála (born 1972), Czech ice hockey player
The name stems from the Arabic verb ḥabba (حَبَّ), meaning to "love", "admire, be fond of".. Another variant which is used as a given name and adjective of the stem from that verb is "maḥbūb" (مَحْبُوب) meaning "well-beloved", commonly written as Mahbub, the female equivalent Mahbuba (Arabic: maḥbūbah مَحْبُوبَة).
This lexically diverse register of language, which emerged in the northern Indian subcontinent, was commonly called Zaban-e Urdu-e Mualla ('language of the orda - court'). Unlike Persian, which is an Iranian language, Urdu is an Indo-Aryan language, written in the Perso-Arabic script ; Urdu has a Indic vocabulary base derived from Sanskrit and ...
The name Urdu was first introduced by the poet Ghulam Hamadani Mushafi around 1780. [29] [30] As a literary language, Urdu took shape in courtly, elite settings. [76] [77] While Urdu retained the grammar and core Indo-Aryan vocabulary of the local Indian dialect Khariboli, it adopted the Perso-Arab writing system, written in the Nastaleeq style.
The Urdu Wikipedia (Urdu: اردو ویکیپیڈیا), started in January 2004, is the Standard Urdu-language edition of Wikipedia, a free, open-content encyclopedia. [1] [2] As of 1 March 2025, it has 218,309 articles, 191,144 registered users and 7,561 files, and it is the 54th largest edition of Wikipedia by article count, and ranks 20th in terms of depth among Wikipedias with over 150,000 ...
Ghulam Hamdani Mushafi, the poet first believed to have coined the name "Urdu" around 1780 AD for a language that went by a multiplicity of names before his time. [1] Mirza Muhammad Rafi, Sauda (1713–1780) Siraj Aurangabadi, Siraj (1715–1763) Mohammad Meer Soz Dehlvi, Soz (1720-1799) Khwaja Mir Dard, Dard (1721–1785)