Honorifics Most of these refer to
Muslim titles or roles in branches of
Shia Islam •
Aga Khan,
hereditary title of the
Imam of the
Nizari branch of
Isma'ilism. As a suffix, it indicates his children, grandchildren, or great-grandchildren. •
Agha (title), Sir, mister. It is a general term of respect. •
Ayatollah, high-ranking title given to
Twelver Shiʻi clerics. •
Dervish, a mystic or a spiritual guru in
Sufism. •
Khan (title), served at one time as a title for an honoured person. •
Mohyeddin is a personal name for males and as an honorific title in the Islamic tradition. •
Mullah, Muslim cleric. The title has also been used in some Jewish communities to refer to the community's leadership, especially religious leadership. •
Ostad, a master craftsperson, lecturer or a person who is the master of a profession. •
Sayyid and
sharif,
honorific titles that given to men accepted as descendants of
Muhammad. •
Shah, "king", short for Shahanshah, "King of kings", meaning emperor •
Seghatoleslam is an honorific title within the Twelver Shia clergy. Seghatoleslam designates narrators whose justice and trustworthiness have been explicitly verified.
Prefixes •
Hajji, one who had made the
Hajj to
Mecca. •
Jenaab, sir, excellency. •
Karbala' i, one who has made the pilgrimage to Karbala •
Mashhadi, one who has made the pilgrimage to Mashhad, often shortened to Mashti, or Mash. •
Mir, generally indicates the person is a
sayyid(a) or is of royal descent.
Suffixes •
-i, the most common suffix used for Persian surnames. They are, in fact, adjectives created by adding the suffix "-i" to person names, location names or other names. Surnames with "-i" are also popular in other countries of historic Greater Persia and neighbouring countries such as the Caucasus, Pakistan, Turkey, Iraq, and Central Asia. •
-ian, like the above case, but with the addition of the plural suffix "-an", common among Iranians and
Armenians. Examples are Shaheenian (Persian) and
Sargsyan (Armenian). •
-an, similar to English "-s" in "Roberts". •
-pour, "descendant of an Army official (Title)". •
-zadeh, "descendant of". •
-nezhad, -nejad, " of race/clan (Title)". •
-nia, "His/Her highness (Title)". •
-far, "the light of", see
Farr-e Kiyani (Faravahar) •
-bakhsh, "granted by". •
-dad (Old Persian
dāta), "given by". •
-ollah, ("of God"). •
-loo, "from". ==References==