Mu'in Al-Din
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Mu'in Al-Din
Mu'in al-Din or Moinuddin () is a male Muslim name composed of the elements ''Muin'', meaning ''helper'' and ''ad-Din'', meaning ''of the faith''. It may refer to: *Moinuddin Ahmed (other), multiple people *Mu'in ad-Din Unur (d. 1149), Seljuk ruler of Damascus *Mu'in al-Din Chishti (1143–1236), Sufi saint *Mu'in al-Din Hasan ibn al-Shaykh (d. 1246), vizier of the Ayyubid sultanate *Pervâne Mu'in al-Din Suleyman (d. 1277), politician in Anatolia *Mo'in al-Din Junayd ibn Mahmud ibn Muhammad Baghnovi Shirazi, or just Junayd Shirazi (fl. 1389), Persian Sufi poet *Muhammad Mueenuddeen I (d. 1835), sultan of the Maldives *Muhammad Mueenuddeen II (fl. 1887), sultan of the Maldives *Moin-Ud-Daula Bahadur, Sir Nawab Muhammed Moin Uddin Khan (1891–1941), Indian nobleman *Ghulam Moinuddin Khanji (1911–2003), Indian prince *Syed Ghulam Moinuddin Gilani (1920–1997), Pakistani Sufi saint *Syed Moinuddin, Syed Khwaja Moinuddin (1924–1978), Indian association football, football ...
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Ad-Din
Ad-Din ( , "(of) the religion/faith/creed") is a suffix component of some Arabic names in the construct case, meaning 'the religion/faith/creed', e.g. Saif ad-Din ( , "Sword of the Faith"). Varieties are also used in non-Arabic names throughout the Muslim world, It is used as a family name-suffix by some royal Muslim families, including the imperial Seljuks, Walashmas, Mughals, and the noble Alvi Hyderabadi families. The Arabic spelling in its standard transliteration is . Due to the phonological rules involving the " sun letter" ( ), the Arabic letter () is an assimilated letter of the Arabic definite article (). This leads to the variant phonetic transliteration . The first noun of the compound must have the ending -''u'', which, according to the assimilation rules in Arabic (names in general are in the nominative case), assimilates the following ''a''-, thus manifesting into in Classical and Modern Standard Arabic. However, all modern Arabic vernaculars lack the noun ...
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