In Turkish...
Aslan is the Turkish word for lion.
"Aslan" is not an Arabic word. Aslan is a Turkish name for boys that means "lion". The Arabic for "lion" is "Assad", like the current President of Syria.
Aslan is a Turkish word meaning "lion."
I can find no reference to the name Jehovah in the word aslan. The word aslan is a Turkish word meaning lion.
It is the Turkish word for "lion".
Simba is a Swahili word that means Lion. And the lion is the King of the jungle.
Arslan is a boy's name found around the Middle East. It is originally Turkish and means Lion (in Modern Turkish, Aslan).
The word "summoned" appears in "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" when Aslan calls for Peter, Susan, and Lucy to help him defeat the White Witch's army. Aslan summons creatures from all over Narnia to join the battle against the evil forces.
Ranjit means 'the one who wins the battle' as the word ran in Hindi or Punjabi means the battle and the word jit is for victory. Singh is the word in Hindi language for lion. So the word ranjit singh means the lion who wins the battle
The Thai word for lion is Singto. The Thai language is a member of the Taiâ??Kadai language family, which also includes the Lao language of Thailand's neighbor Laos.
The word, lion, derives from the Latin and ancient Greek languages.
The name Aslan is Arslan in its Turkish origin and means 'lion'. It was used as a title borne or byname by medieval Turkish rulers. It is said that C.S. Lewis discovered the name in a footnote in Edward Lane's commentary/translation of The Thousand and One Nights also known as The Arabian Night's Entertainmentsand Lewis was inspired to use the name when he was in the Ottoman Empire(modern day Turkey) and was impressed with the Sultan's elite guards who were called Aslan due to their bravery and loyalty. The name Jadis on the other hand is incredibly difficult to find information on. One possible reason that Lewis used this name is that Jadis in the French language means 'days of old, yore, long ago'. This name could have been used because the British were familiar with the French and/or the meaning of Jadis refers to the witch's history, from the city of Charn in a whole different world from Narnia, as a person or ruler of old. Of course though this is just speculation.