Akram (AHK-rahm) springs from the shimmering sands of Arabic, where it literally means “most generous” and has long been used to toast nobility of spirit as much as birth. Hearing it, one can almost picture a young gentleman holding the door open with a smile—and maybe handing out extra cupcakes while he’s at it. The name threads its way through Islamic history (the Qur’an uses the root word to praise divine kindness) and pops up on today’s global stage with figures like British-Bangladeshi choreographer Akram Khan and Pakistani cricket legend Mohammad Akram. In the United States, Akram has hovered in the 700–900 range for nearly five decades—rare enough to feel distinctive, yet familiar enough to dodge constant mispronunciations. For parents hunting a name that blends an easy, upbeat sound with a built-in lesson in generosity, Akram offers exactly that: a compact two-syllable promise that your little one will grow up sharing more than just toys.
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