Qureshi

ahà nnà

Qureshi (nke a makwaara dị ka Qureyshi, Quraishi, Qurayshi, Qureshy, Quraishy, Qoraishi, Qoreshi, Koraishi, Kureshi, Kureshy, Kureishi, Coreish) bụ aha ezinụlọ ndị Alakụba. Na asụsụ Bekee, ọ nwere ọtụtụ mkpụrụ okwu, na asụsụ Arabic, a na-asụ "قريشي", nke pụtara akụkụ nke Ezinụlọ Quraish (Arabic: قريش). A na-ejikọta aha ahụ na ezinụlọ Muhammad.[1]

Qureshi



Pronunciation [qureːʃiː], [qureʃiː]
Origin
Meaning Member of the Quraish tribe
Region of origin Makkah, Hijaz, modern day Arabia
Other names
Variant form(s) Qureshi, Kureshi, Qurashi, Quraishy, Qureishy, Qureyshi, Qurayshi, Quraishi, Qureshy, Quraishy, Qoraishi, Qoreshi, Koraishi, Kureshi, Kureshy, Kureishi, Kourashi, Coreishi,Qurrish, Quraish

Ọ bụ aha nna a na-ahụkarị na South Asia na akụkụ ụfọdụ nke Western Asia, ọkachasị mpaghara Arab.[1] Ọtụtụ ndị na-ebu aha ahụ, ruo ugbu a, nọ na Pakistan (82%: 1,210,000, n'ime 1,470,000 n'ụwa niile), ebe ọ bụ aha nke itoolu a na-ahụkarị. India nwere nke abụọ kachasị (11%: 162,000), Saudi Arabia (2.5%: 36,300), England (0.65%: 9,580) na Iran sochiri.

Akụkọ ihe mere eme

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Ndị Quraish na mbụ megidere ozizi Muhammad ma kwuo na ha kpagburu ya na ndị na-eso ụzọ ya, mana na oge ọnwụ ya, ha amalitela ịtọghata okwukwe ọhụrụ ma rụọ ọrụ dị mkpa na iweta Arabia na Islam.[2]

Dị ka M Naushad Ansari, onye bụ onye nduzi nke Centre for Dissemination of Universal Message, Delhi ọhụrụ, si kwuo, "Na agbanyeghị nke ahụ, na oge na-adịghị anya, ụfọdụ n'ime ìgwè ndị Alakụba a haziri ma nye onwe ha aha ndị Alakụga. Ha matara ma jikọta onwe ha na ndị Alakụba. Dịka ọmụmaatụ, ndị Qasai ma ọ bụ Qasab ma ọ bụ ndị na-egbu anụ kpọrọ onwe ha Qureshi; ndị na-akpa ákwà dị ka Ansari.[3]

Ntuaka

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Ahmad (2018-06-14). Delhi's Meatscapes: Muslim Butchers in a Transforming Mega-City (in en). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-909538-4.  Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; name "auto" defined multiple times with different content
  2. Dictionary of American Family Names. 2013, Oxford University Press.
  3. Azra (2013). Muslim Backward Classes: A sociological perspective. Sage Publications, 22.