Saʽid

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Saʽid
سعيد
PronunciationArabic: [saˈʕiːd] (About this soundlisten)
Persian: [sæˈʔiːd]
Maltese: [saˈɪt]
GenderMale
Origin
Word/nameArabic
MeaningHappy

Saʽid (also spelled Saʽeid, Said, Sid, Saeed or Sayid; Arabic: سعيدSaʽīd) is a male Arabic given name, which means "happy" and "patient". For the female version, see Saida; for the Turkish variant, see Sait; for the Bosnian variant, see Seid. Said or Sid is the spelling used in most Latin languages.

The Maltese surname Said has the same origin but has been borne by Latin Catholics for over seven centuries. Most Maltese surnames are of Italian origin, but this (with Abdilla) is one of the very few authentically Arabic given names that have survived in the islands as family names. It is a variant of the medieval Sicilian Christian surname Saido or Saito (Saidu), which was derived from the Siculo-Arabic given name Sa'īd used by both Muslims and Christians. In Sicily and Malta, this surname was sometimes Italianized as (De) Felice. The surname was established in Malta by 1419, appearing mostly as Sayd in the militia list of that year. In the 1480 militia list it is spelt mostly Said, but was later variously written Said, Sayd, Sajt, Sait in the Catholic church census of 1687. The anachronistic and undocumented claim that 'Nicolò Sayd', a grandson of Cem (1459–1496, the renegade son of Turkish Sultan Mehmet II) settled in Malta and became the ancestor of all Maltese bearing the surname Said is a fantasy inspired by the writings of historical novelists Maurice Caron and John Freely and recently promoted by amateur genealogists.[citation needed]

Today, francophone countries use transliterations of that name. These include the names Seydoux and Seydou, which are common in Europe and West Africa, respectively.

Given name[]

Abu Sa‘id[]

Surname[]

  • Abdelmadjid Sidi Said, leader of the Algerian trade union UGTA
  • Abdulla Saeed (born 1964), chief justice of the Maldives
  • Ali Said Raygal, Somali politician
  • Amina Said (born 1953), poet
  • Anjum Saeed (born 1968), Pakistani field hockey player
  • Anne Said (1914–1995), English artist
  • Boris Said (born 1962), American race car driver
  • Brian Said (born 1973), Maltese footballer
  • Edward Said (1935–2003), Palestinian-American literary critic and theorist
  • Hakim Said (1920–1998), Pakistani physician and scholar
  • Hilda Saeed (born 1936), Pakistani activist and journalist
  • Hussein Saeed, Iraqi footballer
  • Kurban Said, pseudonym for the author of the novel Ali and Nino
  • Samira Said (born 1961), Moroccan pop star
  • Wafic Saïd (born 1939), Syrian businessman
  • Yaser Abdel Said, FBI Top 10 Most Wanted fugitive
  • Qaboos bin Said Al Said, previous Sultan of Oman
  • Harun Said or Harun Thohir, birth name Tahir bin Mandir, was an Indonesian soldier and terrorist who carried out the MacDonald House bombing on 10 March 1965. He was executed in 1968 alongside his comrade and accomplice Usman bin Haji Muhammad Ali for the murders of three people as resulted from the bombing.

Fictional characters[]

Other uses[]

  • aṣ-Ṣaʿīd (spelled with a Ṣād, صعيد) is the Arabic term for Upper Egypt. The personal name is related to a different root, whose first letter is Sīn.
  • Saïd Business School at Oxford University, name after Wafic Saïd

See also[]

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