Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Hafsa

Meaning — From the Arabic root "ḥ-f-ẓ" meaning to protect, guard, or preserve — though Hafsa is also associated with the young female lion cub in classical Arabic. Hafsa bint Umar was a wife of the Prophet Muhammad, the daughter of Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab, and the keeper of the first written compilation of the Quran.·Arabic origin·Female·HAF-sah

Hafsa Hafsa suggests a guardian quality — a woman who preserves what is sacred, whether that is sacred text, sacred memory, or sacred relationships. Characters named Hafsa tend to be organized, intellectually serious, and deeply loyal keepers of tradition who understand that preservation requires active, ongoing effort.

Best genres for Hafsa

Historical FictionReligious FictionLiterary FictionContemporary Fiction

Famous characters named Hafsa

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


Variations & nicknames

HafsaHafsahHafiza

Pairs well with

Hafsa Al-RashidHafsa MansourHafsa KhalilHafsa NasserHafsa AzizHafsa Hassan

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Saleh

From the Arabic root "ṣ-l-ḥ" meaning righteous, virtuous, good, or proper. In the Quran, Saleh is a prophet sent to the people of Thamud, a pre-Islamic Arab civilization, whose story involves a miraculous she-camel as a sign of God — one of the lesser-known but theologically significant prophetic narratives in Islamic tradition.

Zubair

From the Arabic root "z-b-r" meaning strong, powerful, or firm as iron — Zubair means "strong", "brave", or "the powerful one". Zubair ibn al-Awwam was one of the closest companions of the Prophet Muhammad, one of the ten promised Paradise in Islamic tradition, and one of the great early Muslim military commanders.

Tahir

From the Arabic root "ṭ-h-r" meaning pure, clean, or chaste — both in the physical sense of ritual cleanliness and the spiritual sense of moral purity. Tahir is one of the 99 names of God in Islamic tradition (Al-Tahir, the Pure One) and carries deep spiritual connotations of holiness and unsullied integrity.

Ismail

The Arabic form of Ishmael, from the Hebrew "Yishmael" meaning "God will hear" or "God has heard", compounded from "shama" (to hear) and "El" (God). In Islamic tradition, Ismail is the son of Ibrahim (Abraham) and Hagar, considered the ancestor of the Arab peoples and, with his father, the builder of the Kaaba in Mecca.

Zainab

Believed to derive from the Arabic name of a fragrant tree (the leadwort or a type of acacia), or from a root meaning "ornament of the father". Zainab bint Ali, granddaughter of the Prophet Muhammad, is celebrated in Islamic history for her courage in speaking truth to power after the Battle of Karbala.

Sinbad

The name Sinbad (Arabic: Sindbad) may derive from Persian "Sindbad" or Sanskrit "Siddha-pati" (lord of the accomplished), though the true etymology remains uncertain. Sinbad the Sailor is one of the most famous characters from One Thousand and One Nights, a merchant adventurer from Basra whose seven extraordinary voyages became the Arabian world's defining tales of adventure and wonder.


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