Character Name
Zuri
Zuri A name meaning both "beautiful" and "good" fuses aesthetic and ethical qualities into a single word — beauty here is not merely surface but carries moral weight. Characters named Zuri are often written as genuinely good people whose goodness is inseparable from their attractiveness, making them difficult to dismiss even by those who might be threatened by their qualities.
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Famous characters named Zuri
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Related names
Amara
Igbo · “Used across multiple African traditions: in Igbo it means "grace" or "kindness"; in Swahili it means "eternal" or "immortal"; in Amharic it is the name of a major Ethiopian ethnic group and region, meaning "beautiful" or "pleasant". The convergence of meanings across traditions amplifies the name's resonance.”
Imani
Swahili · “A Swahili word meaning "faith" or "trust", used across East Africa as both a given name and an expression of spiritual ideal. In the Kwanzaa cultural celebration, Imani is the seventh principle, representing faith in community, family, and the African people.”
Nia
Swahili · “A Swahili word meaning "purpose" or "intention". Nia is the fifth principle of Kwanzaa, representing the collective vocation to build and develop the community. In Welsh the name means "bright" or "lustrous", but the African usage carries the specific weight of purposeful vocation.”
More Swahili names
Wangari
“A Kikuyu name from Kenya, also belonging to the lineage of Mumbi's daughters in the Kikuyu founding mythology. Wangari is the name most famous through Wangari Maathai, the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize laureate who founded the Green Belt Movement, planting over 51 million trees across Africa.”
Zawadi
“A Swahili word meaning "gift" or "present". Used across East Africa as a given name expressing gratitude for the child as a gift, and as one of the Kwanzaa principles' related concepts. The word is also used in everyday Swahili for any kind of present or offering.”
Hamisi
“A Swahili name meaning "born on Thursday" — from Arabic "khamis" (five, Thursday being the fifth day in the traditional Arabic week). In East African Swahili tradition, names derived from the days of the week are common, recording the day of a child's birth.”
Imani
“A Swahili word meaning "faith" or "trust", used across East Africa as both a given name and an expression of spiritual ideal. In the Kwanzaa cultural celebration, Imani is the seventh principle, representing faith in community, family, and the African people.”
Baraka
“From Arabic "baraka" meaning "blessing" or "divine grace", absorbed into Swahili and widely used across East Africa and the broader Muslim world. Baraka denotes a spiritual energy or blessing that can be passed from a holy person or sacred object to a recipient.”
Juma
“A Swahili name meaning "born on Friday" — from Arabic "jum'a" (Friday, the day of communal Muslim prayer). Friday is the holiest day of the week in Islam, giving Juma a sacred resonance in East Africa's coastal Muslim communities.”
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