Meaning & History
Noura is a feminine given name and surname of Arabic origin, serving as an alternate transcription of Arabic نورة or نورا (see Nura). It is directly related to Nur, an Arabic word for "light," which in Islamic tradition is also one of the 99 names of Allah (al-Nūr). Noura shares its root with several variant forms including Noor, Noora, Nora, Norah, and Nour. In other languages and cultures, counterpart forms include Nur in Uyghur, Noor in Urdu, Nor in Malay, and Nuru in Swahili.
Notable Bearers
While Noura or its variants are widely used across the Arab world and beyond, a number of notable individuals bear the name.
- Noura (singer), an Algerian singer.
- Noura Al Jasmi (born 2002), Emirati beauty queen; Miss Earth UAE 2024.
- Noura Aljizawi, Syrian political activist.
- Noura Alktebi, Emirati paralympic athlete.
- Noura Bensaad, Tunisian writer.
- Noura Borsali (1953–2017), Tunisian academic and journalist.
- Noura Elsayed (born 1987), Egyptian middle-distance runner.
- Noura Erakat (born 1980), Palestinian American legal scholar, human rights attorney, and assistant professor.
- Noura Ghazi (born 1981), Syrian lawyer.
- Noura Hashemi (born 1983), Iranian actress.
- Noura Hussein, Sudanese teenager sentenced to death for killing her rapist.
- Noora Salem Jasim (born 1996), Nigerian-born Bahraini athlete.
- Noura Al Kaabi, Emirati government minister and businesswoman.
- Noura Mana (born 1997), Moroccan footballer.
Cultural Significance
The name's core meaning, "light," gives it a positive and luminous connotation. In Islamic culture, light is a prominent symbol, associated with divine guidance and the Nur (light) verse in the Quran (24:35). The similarity in sound to European names like Nora sometimes leads to confusion, although it remains distinctively Arabic in origin. The name is widely used across Arabic-speaking countries and among Muslim communities globally.
- Meaning: light
- Origin: Arabic
- Type: First name
- Usage Regions: Arabic-speaking world, Muslim communities
Related Names
Sources: Wikipedia — Noura