Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Aaliyah

Meaning — Aaliyah is an Arabic feminine given name, the feminine form of Ali, meaning "high," "exalted," "sublime," or "ascending." In Arabic it literally means "high," "lofty," or "sublime," suggesting a person of elevated spiritual and personal stature. The name became widely known in English-speaking countries in the 1990s through the American R&B singer Aaliyah.·Arabic origin·Female·ah-LEE-yah

Aaliyah A name meaning "high" and "exalted" creates inherent expectations of transcendence. Characters named Aaliyah often carry a natural magnetism — women who seem to exist at a slightly elevated register of experience, their emotional and spiritual lives more vivid than those around them.

Best genres for Aaliyah

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionYoung AdultRomance

Famous characters named Aaliyah

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

AaliyahAliyaAliyahAliaLeah

Pairs well with

Aaliyah HassanAaliyah RahmanAaliyah WilliamsAaliyah JohnsonAaliyah DavisAaliyah Thompson

Writing a character named Aaliyah?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

Related names


More Arabic names

Samir

From the Arabic root "s-m-r" meaning to entertain with evening conversation or to keep company at night, Samir is the masculine counterpart of Samira and means "one who entertains at night" or "jovial companion". The name evokes the beloved tradition of evening storytelling and conversation in Arabic culture.

Yasmine

From the Arabic yasamin, derived from the Persian yasaman, referring to the jasmine flower. The word entered Arabic and subsequently spread throughout the Islamic world, carrying associations of beauty, delicacy, and intoxicating fragrance. Jasmine has deep symbolic resonance in Persian and Arabic poetry as an emblem of beloved feminine grace.

Aziz

From the Arabic root "ʿ-z-z" meaning to be mighty, powerful, or rare and precious — conveying both physical strength and the rarity of the precious. Al-Aziz (The Mighty) is one of the 99 names of God in Islam. As a name for humans, Aziz means "powerful", "dear", "precious", or "beloved", combining strength with preciousness.

Jabir

From the Arabic root "j-b-r" meaning to set a bone, to restore, to compel, or to console — the root from which the word "algebra" (al-jabr) is derived. Jabir ibn Hayyan (Geber) was the 8th-century Arab alchemist and chemist widely regarded as the father of chemistry, whose extensive writings on experimental science shaped both Islamic and European science.

Azra

From Arabic "Azrā" meaning virgin, pure, or maiden — conveying unspoiled purity and youth. In Persian classical poetry, Azra is the female protagonist of the romance "Vamiq and Azra" — one of the oldest Persian love stories, pre-dating the Islamic era and drawing on Hellenistic sources, in which Azra is the beloved of the hero Vamiq.

Jabril

A variant form of Jibril — the Arabic rendering of Gabriel, from the Hebrew "Gavri'el" meaning "God is my strength". Jabril preserves the Arabic phonology and is used interchangeably with Jibril across different Arabic-speaking regions to refer to the archangel who is the divine messenger of Islam and the revealer of the Quran.


Explore more