
- Origin: Russian Ленар, Ленара
- Meaning: “Lenin’s army.”
- Gender: Lenar (m); Lenara (female)
- Variants: Linar Линар (m); Lenur Ленур (m); Linara Линара (f); Lenura Ленура (f).
- Usage: Tatar, Central Asia, Pakistan
- First Est. 1930s
Lenar and Lenara originated as 20th-century Soviet neologisms, coined from the phrase Ленинская армия (Leninskaya armya), meaning “Lenin’s army.” Such ideological names were created to reflect Soviet ideals and to replace traditional religious names across the USSR.
Unlike many other revolutionary inventions that faded after the fall of the Soviet Union, Lenar, Lenara and its offshoots of Linar/Linara endured among Tatars and other Central Asian peoples. Their survival is often attributed to their smooth, cross-cultural sound and to later folk etymologies that link them with the Arabic root nūr (“light”) or the Persian nār (“fire”). Some modern South Asian baby name sites have also applied the meaning “born of beauty,” from Arabic but this is not accurate.
In recent years, these names have also spread to South Asian Muslim communities, largely due to the mistaken belief that they stem from Arabic or Persian origins rather than from Soviet linguistic invention.
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