Traditionally, Afghans only use a first name and lack a last name. This is also the case among
Pashtuns in neighbouring Pakistan. Those having only a first name may be distinguished by tribe, place of birth, profession or honorific title. It is generally those from developing regions who are known by a
mononym due to the lack of a legal identification system. They may also have multiple mononyms (i.e. may be called by multiple personal names).
Males Male names are normally compounded, for example
Ahmad Khan, in which two words make up one single given name. Males often have Islamic names derived from
Arabic that are popular throughout the Muslim world, whereas females more commonly have names from local Pashto or Persian origin, which itself can have derivations from various
Indo-Iranian languages such as
Sanskrit. Male first names very often have two parts, usually the "proper" name and the "subordinate" name. For example: • The full name
Mohammad Zaman, which consists of the subordinate name
Mohammad and the proper name
Zaman. • The full name
Ghulam Hazrat, which consists of the subordinate name
Hazrat and the proper name
Ghulam. This is not always the case, and sometimes both parts are combined as one, for example: • The full name
Abdul Ali • The full name
Din Mohammad In rare cases, a male first name only has a single part, for example the full name
Farid, or the full name
Homayoun. Below is a list of assorted Afghan given names of local Pashto or Persian origin or otherwise of Indo-Persian origin.
Females Female first names tend to have a single component, for example
Fereyba,
Laila, or
Roya. In rarer instances they may have two parts, for example
Gol Khanom. Female names of Arabic origin are less common than Arabic male names; some examples are:
Jamila,
Nadia or
Zahra. The table below shows a list of assorted female names of Pashto or Persian origin (or otherwise of Indo-Persian origin), with many referring to beauty and nature.
Neutral names Examples of gender-neutral Afghan names include:
Gul (meaning "flower"),
Lal,
Sultan,
Taj, and
Shaista. ==Last names==