This is not an Arabic name.
secretary bird
Mostly considered of Arabic origin but the name "Saad", written in Arabic as "سعد"; is of African origin. The name is generally used for males. It means: prosperous. I have also read for it to mean: to congratulate. Thus in Arabic "Mubarak" or "مبادق".
The name Ndiaye is African. It's possibly derived from the Arabic nadīy meaning generous.
There is no "Egyptian" language any more; in ancient times, Egyptians had a language of their own, but these days, Egyptians tend to speak Arabic. The name "Barack" is a common Arabic and middle-eastern name, which means Blessed. The name Obama is an African family name, related to an ancestral group who live in Kenya; there is no evidence the word has any meaning in the Arabic language.
No, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was not arabic; he was born as Ferdinand Lewis 'Lew' Alcindor in New York with African American heritage, not Arabic. He changed his name after converting to Islam, which does not necessarily mean he even learned arabic.
Arabic is an official language in North African countries.
Arabic
Arabic
The name Barrack Hussein Obama is a combination of African, Arabic, and Swahili origins. "Barrack" is an Arabic word meaning "blessing," while "Hussein" is an Arabic name with historical significance. "Obama" is a Luo name from East Africa, specifically Kenya, and it means "to lean or bend."
They don't. One is a first name, the other a last name. One is an Arabic name, one is an African name. The fact that they are similar in sound (or that they rhyme) is totally a coincidence. (And as for Osama, that is a translation of the Arabic name -- the actual sound is closer to a U-- Usama-- than an O.)
Layla means night or dark beauty. It from the Arabic,
yes its an arabic name