Imad
Appearance
(Redirected from Emad)
Pronunciation | Arabic: [ʕɪˈmaːd, ʕeˈmæːd] (among others) Persian: [ʔeˈmɒːd] |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Language(s) | Arabic |
Origin | |
Meaning | 'Support', 'Pillar'[1] |
Region of origin | Arabia |
Other names | |
Alternative spelling | Imaad, Emad, Emaad, Imed, Aimad |
Imad (also transliterated as Emad, Imed and Aimad Arabic: عماد) is an Arabic masculine given name and surname and means "support" or "pillar".
Given name
[edit]- Imād ad-Dīn Muhammad bin Qasim, Umayyad Caliphate general
- Imad Abbas (1975-2004), Palestinian military commander
- Imad Baba, American soccer player
- Emad Hajjaj, Jordanian political cartoonist
- Imad Hawari (born 1979), Lebanese journalist, actor
- Emad al-Janabi (born 1965), Iraqi blacksmith
- Imad Khalili, Swedish footballer
- Imad Khamis, Syrian politician
- Imad Kotbi, Moroccan radio presenter
- Emad Mohammed, Iraqi footballer
- Emad Mostaque, founder of Stability AI
- Imad Rahman, Pakistani American fiction writer
- Imad Rami, Syrian Nasheed singer
- Imad Wasim, Pakistani international cricketer
- Imad Feghaly, Lebanese actor and voice actor
- Imad Abullah Sarah, Syrian politician
Imed
[edit]- Imed Abdelnabbi (born 1957), Egyptian chess player
- Imed Louati (born 1993), Tunisian footballer
- Imed Memmich (born 1966), Tunisian scholar and politician
- Imed Meniaoui (born 1983), Tunisian footballer
- Imed Mhedhebi (born 1976), Tunisian footballer
- Imed Ketata, Tunisian footballer
- Imed Trabelsi (born 1974), Tunisian businessman and politician
- Imed Ben Younes (born 1974), Tunisian former football player and current coach
Surname
[edit]- Mitra Emad, American anthropologist
- Parvis Emad (1935-2023), American philosopher and Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at DePaul University
Family origin
[edit]The Imad family is named for al-Amadiyyah, near Mosul in northern Iraq and, like the Jumblatt family, is thought to be of Kurdish origin.[2]
Some unconfirmed sources allege that the roots of Family Imad ancestors are associated with those of Imad ad-Din Zengi (1087; † 1146), who was in turn the Atabeg of Mosul from 1127 to his death in 1146.
Imad as a family name also indicates descent from the originally Druze feudal family Al-Imad in the Chouf region of Mount Lebanon.
References
[edit]- ^ "Imad - Islamic Name Meaning - Baby Names for Muslims".
- ^ Origins of the Druze People and Religion, by Philip K. Hitti, 1924