Ifrah comes from Arabic and Somali usage and means joy, happiness, or delight.
Ifrah is an Arabic name rooted in the verb أفرح (afraḥa), meaning "to make happy," "to bring joy," or "to delight." It belongs to a rich family of Arabic names built around the concept of happiness and gladness — farḥ, farīḥa, faraḥ — all sharing the same three-letter root ف-ر-ح (f-r-ḥ). Where some names in this family name the feeling of joy as a quality the bearer possesses, Ifrah carries an active, transitive sense: this is someone who brings happiness to others, a gift of delight made flesh.
The name is especially prevalent in the Horn of Africa — Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti — as well as across the Arab world and among Muslim communities in South Asia and the diaspora. In Somalia it is among the most beloved girls' names, combining cultural resonance with a sound that is both easy and melodic. The most prominent contemporary bearer is Ifrah Ahmed, a Somali-Irish activist and survivor of female genital mutilation who became a global advocate against the practice, addressing the United Nations and inspiring legislation in Ireland and internationally.
Her courage gave the name a dimension of remarkable moral force. Ifrah is short enough to travel well across languages — it requires no shortening, no nickname, no explanation of length — while its meaning is universal enough to resonate anywhere. Parents who choose it often speak of wanting a name that is both grounded in their cultural heritage and generous in its spirit, a name that declares an intention for the child's effect on the world around her. Few names make that promise more directly.