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 |
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]
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
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]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
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- ↑ 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 - ↑ Dictionary of American Family Names. 2013, Oxford University Press.
- ↑ Azra (2013). Muslim Backward Classes: A sociological perspective. Sage Publications, 22.