Naziya is an Arabic-derived name often associated with pride, distinction, or prosperity.
Naziya is a feminine name rooted in the Arabic and Urdu word *naz*, a word with no perfect English equivalent — it encompasses pride, coyness, playful affectation, and the gentle confidence of someone who knows they are cherished. To have *naz* is to carry yourself with a certain poised assurance, and the name Naziya extends that quality into a personal identity: the proud one, the graceful, the one who moves through the world with elegant self-possession.
The name is most prevalent in South Asian Muslim communities — particularly in Pakistan, Bangladesh, and among diaspora communities in the Gulf states and the United Kingdom. Its near-twin Nazia became famous in the 1980s through Nazia Hassan, the Pakistani pop singer whose 1980 debut "Aap Jaisa Koi" became a pan-subcontinental hit and one of the first South Asian crossover songs to chart internationally. That association gave the name Nazia a glamorous, youthful energy that Naziya shares and subtly extends.
In Urdu poetry and ghazal tradition, *naz* is a beloved motif — poets write of a beloved's *naz-o-andaz*, the combination of pride and style that makes the beloved irresistible. A child named Naziya inherits that poetic legacy, a name that is, in a sense, a small verse in itself.