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Fatima bint Umar: Umm Kulthum bint Ali [4] [8] (married Umar in the year 17 AH) Zayd ibn Umar: Ruqayya bint Umar: Luhya (a woman from Yemen whose marital status with Umar is disputed; al-Waqidi said she was Umm Walad, meaning a slave woman) [3] Abd al-Rahman ibn Umar (the middle or youngest) Fukayha (as Umm Walad) [9] Zaynab bint Umar (youngest ...
Bengali Hindu families use names of Sanskrit origin, followed by Bengali. They use many names which are listed below. Some of their names are somewhat shortened and altered, like Chatterjee, owing to British influence. Some family names may be common between all religions, such as চৌধুরী (Choudhuri / Chowdhury), সরকার ...
This is a Chronological list of Bengali language authors (regardless of nationality or religion), by the order of their year of birth. Alphabetical order is used only when chronological order cannot be ascertained. The list also marks the winners of major international and national awards:
Arjumand Ali (1870–1914), first Bengali Muslim novelist; Asaddor Ali, writer, folklorist and winner of Bangla Academy Literary Award; Ekram Ali (born 1950), poet; Monica Ali (born 1967), novelist; Sadeq Ali, poet best known for the Halat-un-Nabi puthi; Syed Mujtaba Ali (1904–1974), novelist and essayist; Syed Murtaza Ali, writer and historian
Umar ibn ʿAlī (Arabic: عُمَر بن عَلیّ), was one of the children of Ali ibn Abi Talib who accompanied his brother, Husayn ibn Ali, to Karbala and was killed on the day of Ashura. It is said that except him (who was called Umar al-Asghar), Ali had another son called Umar al-Akbar, whose mother was Umm Habib Al-Sahba and was not ...
Dhū al-Shamālayn ʿUmayr ibn ʿAbd ʿAmr al-Khuzāʿī, Meccan sahabi/companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad; Mus’ab ibn Umayr (7th century CE), Sahabi - companion of Muhammad
Farid (Arabic: فَرِيد fariyd, farīd), also spelt Fareed or Ferid and accented Férid, is an Arabic masculine personal name or surname meaning "unique, singular ("the One"), incomparable". [1] For many communities, including in the Middle East , the Balkans , North Africa , and South East Asia , the name Fareed is common across generations.
Neamat Imam is a Bangladeshi-Canadian fiction writer (born January 5, 1971) whose name was popularized with the debut novel The Black Coat, a novel that uses a Bangladeshi political setting around 1974 when the Mujib government experienced a famine. Black Coat is a metaphor that represents the father of the Bengali nation, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman ...