📖 Sobre Rafi
Rafi é um nome árabe que significa 'elevado, exaltado' (da raiz r-f-', elevar), compartilhando sua raiz com Al-Rafi', um dos 99 nomes de Deus no Islã; também é uma forma curta de Rafiq (companheiro) e Rafael; mais gloriosamente associado a Muhammad Rafi (1924–1980), o cantor de playback indiano cuja voz — em mais de 7.000 canções — definiu a era de ouro de Bollywood.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemArabic
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoElevated, exalted, sublime; also a diminutive of Rafiq (companion) and Rafael
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Muhammad Rafi — Indian playback singer (1924–1980), widely considered one of the greatest voices in the history of Indian cinema and South Asian music; recorded an estimated 7,000 to 25,000 songs in Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, and many other languages over six decades; his voice — combining extraordinary range with emotional depth — defined the golden age of Bollywood music; he received a state funeral in 1980 attended by hundreds of thousands of mourners.
- Raffi — Canadian-Armenian children's musician and author (born Rafael Cavoukian, 1948 in Cairo), who performs professionally as Raffi; known for beloved children's songs including Baby Beluga (1980), Bananaphone (1994), and Down by the Bay; he has sold tens of millions of albums worldwide and is one of the most influential children's entertainers in North American history; also an environmental and children's rights advocate.
- Al-Rafi' (Islamic divine name) — One of the 99 beautiful names of God (Asma al-Husna) in Islamic theology, meaning 'The Exalter' or 'The One Who Raises' — referring to God's power to elevate the righteous in spiritual station; the root r-f-' (to raise, to exalt) gives the name Rafi its primary meaning and its theological resonance as a name aspiring to divine elevation.
- Rafik Hariri — Lebanese Prime Minister (1944–2005, served 1992–1998 and 2000–2004), a billionaire businessman who rebuilt Beirut's city centre after the Lebanese Civil War and became the most powerful political figure in post-war Lebanon; he was assassinated by a massive car bomb in Beirut on February 14, 2005 — an event that triggered the Cedar Revolution and remains one of the most significant political assassinations in modern Middle Eastern history.