Legit name
Are Allira and Zahli legit names, I have heard them a few times (and with different spellings) but not sure if they are made up or what?
thanks.
Me: Cassie Anne
Him: Grant Stephen
Them: Hayley Anne and Skye Louise
thanks.
Me: Cassie Anne
Him: Grant Stephen
Them: Hayley Anne and Skye Louise
Replies
If you have heard them as the official legal names of real people, they are certainly "legitimate", whether they've been recently created or not.
Al-Zahli seems to be a Muslim surname, and Zahli a place name in Lebanon. The Complete Book of Muslim & Parsi Names by Gandhi & Husain lists "Zali" as an Arabic name meaning "strong, firm, muscular", but that may be a coincidence.
Most of the examples of women named Allira I can find through Google live in Australia, and this may be a name from an Australian aboriginal language, because I found the following website which is an anthropolgical treatise on incest (of all things!) which seems to imply that Allira was originally a kinship term for "brother's daughter" in the Arrernte or Arunta culture:
http://www.timothyjpmason.com/WebPages/Publications/Incest_Frontiers.htm
Kinship terms are often used as forms of address. (In English we sometimes address our relatives as Sister, Cousin, etc.). So perhaps some White Australian heard a member of the Arrernte addressing a girl as "Allira" and assumed it was a name. That's just a guess on my part; hope some Australian boarder will be able to confirm or deny it. :)
Al-Zahli seems to be a Muslim surname, and Zahli a place name in Lebanon. The Complete Book of Muslim & Parsi Names by Gandhi & Husain lists "Zali" as an Arabic name meaning "strong, firm, muscular", but that may be a coincidence.
Most of the examples of women named Allira I can find through Google live in Australia, and this may be a name from an Australian aboriginal language, because I found the following website which is an anthropolgical treatise on incest (of all things!) which seems to imply that Allira was originally a kinship term for "brother's daughter" in the Arrernte or Arunta culture:
http://www.timothyjpmason.com/WebPages/Publications/Incest_Frontiers.htm
Kinship terms are often used as forms of address. (In English we sometimes address our relatives as Sister, Cousin, etc.). So perhaps some White Australian heard a member of the Arrernte addressing a girl as "Allira" and assumed it was a name. That's just a guess on my part; hope some Australian boarder will be able to confirm or deny it. :)
Thankyou for that.
You're welcome!