Look up Gharib, għarib, or qarib in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Qarib (
Arabic and in Persian: قريب, romanized: qarīb) means near or familiar. Gharib (
Arabic and Persian: غريب, romanized: ğarīb), written differently, means strange or stranger. Although the pronunciation of the two words vary slightly, the difference is often imperceptible. Both are commonly transliterated into English as "gharib".
Susie Gharib (born 1950), American business news journalist and TV anchor
Gharib Amzine (born 1973), retired Moroccan footballer. He played for Mulhouse, Racing Strasbourg and Troyes AC, all in France, usually as a midfielder
Gharib Shah (d. 1629), Iranian aristocrat who rebelled against Safavid rule in 1629/30, but was defeated and later executed
Shapoor Gharib (1933–2012), Iranian director and screenplay writer
This
disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gharib. If an
internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Look up Gharib, għarib, or qarib in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Qarib (
Arabic and in Persian: قريب, romanized: qarīb) means near or familiar. Gharib (
Arabic and Persian: غريب, romanized: ğarīb), written differently, means strange or stranger. Although the pronunciation of the two words vary slightly, the difference is often imperceptible. Both are commonly transliterated into English as "gharib".
Susie Gharib (born 1950), American business news journalist and TV anchor
Gharib Amzine (born 1973), retired Moroccan footballer. He played for Mulhouse, Racing Strasbourg and Troyes AC, all in France, usually as a midfielder
Gharib Shah (d. 1629), Iranian aristocrat who rebelled against Safavid rule in 1629/30, but was defeated and later executed
Shapoor Gharib (1933–2012), Iranian director and screenplay writer
This
disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gharib. If an
internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.