Wikipedia
Sabit
Sabit is a Bosnian and Turkish male given name of Arabic origin, meaning "firmly in place”, “stable”, “unshakable” from Thabit . Notable people with the name include:
- Sabit Damulla Abdulbaki, Uyghur independence movement leader
- Baptist Sabit Frances, South Sudanese politician
- Sabit Hadžić (born 1957), former basketball player, competed for Yugoslavia in the Olympics
- Sabit İnce (born 1954), Turkish poet and Islamist scholar
- Sami Sabit Karaman (1877–1957), officer of the Ottoman Army and a general of the Turkish Army
- Sabit Lulo (born 1883), Albanian politician, active in the Ottoman Empire and Albania
- Sabit Mukanov (1900–1973) poet, social activist, academic, head of the Writers' Union of Kazakhstan
- Sabit Noyan (1887–1967), officer of the Ottoman Army and the general of the Turkish Army
- Sabit Orujov (1912–1981), Deputy Prime-minister of Azerbaijan SSR (1957–1959)
- Sabit Osman Avcı (1921–2009), Turkish politician
- Zaid Bin Sabit, one of the closest companions of Muhammad
- Ferdi Sabit Soyer (born 1952), former Prime Minister of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus