starting from Saturday (from right to left): السبت, الأحد, الاثنين, الثلاثاء, الأربعاء, الخميس, الجمعة
The names for the weekdays (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday) are proper nouns.
Yes, Arabic names in Gulf countries like ( Kuwait, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Yemen .. etc ) differ somehow from names in other Arabic countries.
Mohammed
you don't change names from Arabic to English
All names for weekdays are derived from the names of Norse gods and goddesses. Thursday is Thor's day from the Norse god Thor.
Birds in Arabic means : Toyour ...... Bird : tayr and it written in Arabic this way : طيور
I think Taylor in Arabic is : Taymoor . not sure about it but I'm from Jordan and I have some informations about English names in Arabic :)
haititans
mahafil
Arabic is the language. Islam is the religion and political system. "Islam" in Arabic means "Submission." "Arab" in Arabic means "bedouin."
Yes, the word 'weekdays' is a noun, a plural, common, compound, abstract noun; a word for periods of time. The words for the weekdays (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday) are proper nouns, the names of specific days of the week; also abstract nouns as words for periods of time.
There is no such thing is Islamic names, there are Arabic names. Since Arabic is the language if the Qura'an many Muslims choose Arabic names. In answer to your question, Hafsa is an Arabic name, it means "white bird rich with feathers" it also means "mercy". It happened to be the name of a Prophet's wife, which is why it is popular among Muslims.