Ata (name)

Ata, Atta, or Ataa may refer more specifically to:

Ata
PronunciationArabic pronunciation: [ʕatˤaː]
Persian pronunciation: [ʔætɒː]
Turkish pronunciation: [ˈata]
GenderMale
Origin
Word/nameArabic, Fante, Old Turkic
MeaningGift in Arabic; one of the twins in Fante; forefather in Turkish
Region of originSoutheastern Europe, Asia Minor; Middle East; Western Africa
Other names
Alternative spelling‘Aṭā, `Ata, 'Ata, Atta, & Ataa in Arabic; Ataa in Fante
DerivedFrom Arabic atiyah, "gift"; from Old Turkic ata, "father", possibly from proposed Proto-Altaic *ĕ́t`e, "elder relative"
Related namesAtiyah, Ataullah, and Ata-ur-Rahman in Arabic; Agata, Aminata, and Barbata in Fante

Ata is the anglicized form of several names.

First element of compound name

Given name

Arabic

  • Ata al-Ayyubi (1877–1951), Ottoman-Arab civil servant
  • Ataa Jaber (born 1993), Israeli-Arab footballer
  • Ata-Malik Juvayni (1226–1283), Iranian historian
  • Ata Nahai (born 1960), Kurdish Iranian novelist
  • Atta Muhammad Nur (born 1965), Afghan governor
  • Ata Abu Rashta (born 1943), Islamic jurist, scholar and writer
  • Ata Yamrali (born 1982), German-Afghan footballer
  • Ata al-Khadim (ʿAṭā al-Khādim; fl.mid-12th century), governor of Baalbek and viceroy of Damascus
  • Ata ibn Haffaz al-Sulami (ʿAṭā ibn Ḥaffāẓ al-Sulamī; fl.mid-12th century), eunuch and vizier of the emirate of Damascus

Fante

  • Ataa Oko (1919–2012), Ghanaian sculptor and artist

Turkish

  • Ata Demirer (born 1972), Turkish stand-up comedian and actor

Surname

Arabic

  • Mahmoud Mahmoud Atta (born 1954), American-Arab militant
  • Mohamed Atta (1968–2001), Egyptian Islamist, ringleader of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11 in the September 11 attacks
  • Shahla Ata (1959–2015), Afghan politician and congresswoman
  • Walid Atta (born 1986), Swedish footballer
  • Wasil ibn Ata (700–748), Islamic scholar

Turkish

Common name

  • Ata is the commonly-abbreviated name for the Atacama skeleton, the six-inch long remains of a human with major genetic abnormalities that was discovered in 2003

References

  1. Salahuddin Ahmed (1999). A Dictionary of Muslim Names. London: Hurst & Company.
  2. S. A. Rahman (2001). A Dictionary of Muslim Names. New Delhi: Goodword Books.
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