Aziz
Aziz (Arabic: عزيز, ʿazīz, [ʕaziːz]) was originally a Northwest Semitic Phoenician-Aramaic-Hebrew-Arabic word, but is now much more commonly (but not exclusively) known as a Central Semitic Arabic male name. The feminine form of both the adjective and the given name is Aziza.
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Aziz in Arabic is derived from the root ʕ-z-z with a meaning of "strong, powerful" and the adjective has acquired its meaning of "dear, darling, precious". It is a cognate of Hebrew oz עוז meaning "might, strength, power". The Semitic word refers to the "power and glory" of deities and kings. In the Latinised form "Azizus" it is attested as the name of one of the Priest-Kings who ruled Emesa (the modern Homs, Syria) as clients of the Roman Empire.
In ancient Levantine mythology, Azizos or Aziz is the Palmyrene Arab[1] god of the morning star.
The Arabian goddess Al-Uzza, also related to the planet Venus, is named from the same root ʕ-z-z and is one of the three daughter goddesses mentioned in the Quran.
Al-Aziz is one of the names of God in Islam, and the word is also used as a royal title borne by the high nobles of Egypt, being a title borne by the prophet Joseph in the Quranic Surah-e-Yusuf, and also by the Biblical Potiphar, referred to in the Quran as Aziz.
It is used in existing Semitic languages such as Arabic, Assyrian Neo Aramaic, Mandic, Hebrew, and also in non-Semitic languages like Turkish, Kurdish, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Persian, Urdu, Pashtu, Dari, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Uzbek, Uyghur, Balochi, Bengali, Somali, Indonesian, and Malaysian.
Aziz is a common masculine given name, especially in the Muslim world but it has also continued to be used by indigenous non-Muslim peoples in the Middle East, e.g. Assyrians, and Mandeans.
Given name
Azeez
- Azeez Abu (born 1994), Nigerian beach soccer player
- Azeez Al-Shaair (born 1997), American NFL football player, outside linebacker
- Azeez Shobowale Shobola (born 1992), Nigerian footballer
Aziz
- Aziz Ansari (born 1983), Indian-American stand-up comedian and actor
- Aziz Azion (born 1984), Ugandan R&B singer-songwriter
- Aziz Behich (born 1990), Australian footballer
- Aziz Ibrahim (born 1964), British guitarist
- Aziz Mian (1942–2000), Pakistani singer
- Aziz Nesin (1915–1995), Turkish humorist and author
- Aziz Sancar (born 1946), Turkish scientist and 2015 Nobel laureate in Chemistry
- Aziz Shavershian (1989–2011), Russian-Australian bodybuilder and internet personality of Kurdish descent
- Aziz Yıldırım (born 1952), Turkish businessman
Surname
Azeez
- A. M. A. Azeez (1911–1973), Ceylonese civil servant, educator, social worker
- Ade Azeez (born 1994), English footballer
- Dan Azeez (born 1989), British boxer
- Fatima Azeez (born 1992), Nigerian badminton player
- K. P. A. C. Azeez (1934–2003), Indian film actor in Malayalam cinema
- Ramon Azeez (born 1992), Nigerian footballer
Aziz
- Aaron Aziz (born 1976), Singaporean actor
- Arif Aziz (born 1943), Azerbaijan artist and educator
- Douglas Aziz (born 1942), Assyrian Iraqi footballer
- Gamal Aziz, also known as Gamal Mohammed Abdelaziz, Egyptian former President and Chief Operating Officer of Wynn Resorts, and former CEO of MGM Resorts International
- Lisa Aziz (born 1962), British television presenter and journalist
- Michael Aziz, American engineer
- Philip Aziz (1923–2009), Canadian artist of Lebanese ancestry
- Riza Aziz, Malaysian producer
- Shaukat Aziz (born 1949), Pakistani Prime Minister
- Tariq Aziz (born Mikhail Yuhanna) (1936–2015), ethnic Assyrian former Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister under Saddam Hussein
- Tariq Aziz (field hockey, born 1938) (born 1938), Pakistani field hockey player
- Tariq Aziz (TV personality) (born 1936), Pakistani TV personality
- Tipu Aziz (born 1956), Professor of neurosurgery at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford University
See also
- Azis (disambiguation)
- Aziza (disambiguation) (equivalent feminine name)
- Abdul Aziz, Arabic theophoric name
- Azziz (disambiguation)
- Azizah
References
- Drijvers, H. J. W. (2015). Cults and Beliefs at Edessa. Brill Publishers. pp. Chapter Six: THE CULT OF AZIZOS AND MONIMOS AND OTHER ARAB DEITIES. ISBN 978-90-04-29562-9.