Hamed Abdel Fattah Goher (15 November 1907 – 17 June 1992) ( Arabic : حامد عبد الفتاح جوهر ) was an Egyptian oceanographer , scientist and TV presenter. He appeared for over 18 years in his program The World of the Seas .
12-717: (Redirected from Hamed ) For places in Iran, see Hamid, Iran . For the village in Pakistan, see Hameed, Attock . Hamid Pronunciation Arabic: [ħaˈmiːd] Urdu: [ɦɛˈmiːd̪] Gender Male Origin Word/name Arabic Meaning Praiseworthy Other names Variant form(s) Hamed, Hameed Related names Hamad , Hamit Hamid refers to two different but related Arabic given names , both of which come from
24-520: A famous weekly television program broadcast on Friday called The World of the Seas , and its broadcast lasted for 18 years, where he used to show films about various marine creatures and he commented explaining the picture and introducing the different factions, their habits and qualities. those years. He always started his program with the phrase “Good evening,” and he uttered this phrase in a strong and distinctive way. The late artist Saeed Saleh imitated him in
36-637: A master's degree, the subject of which was "Micro anatomy and histology of the endocrine glands in the rabbit". After that, Gohar moved to work at the Marine Biology Station in Hurghada , and continued scientific research in the creatures of the Red Sea , until he obtained a doctorate in science in this branch of knowledge, and perhaps - as Dr. Abdel Halim Montaser says - the first to obtain it in Egypt. Gohar had
48-593: A village in Hazro Tehsil, Punjab, Pakistan Abdul Hamid Hamid al-Din (disambiguation) Hamidids , 14th century Turkic dynasty Hamit Hamidah (disambiguation) References [ edit ] ^ Salahuddin Ahmed (1999). A Dictionary of Muslim Names . London: Hurst & Company. ^ S. A. Rahman (2001). A Dictionary of Muslim Names . New Delhi: Goodword Books. [REDACTED] Name list This page or section lists people that share
60-652: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Hamed Gohar He was unmarried and dedicated his life to the sea. Gohar initiated the first full-scale research in ocean studies in Egypt and the Arab countries. In 1931, he began research on Xenia , or soft corals of the Red Sea, finalized in 1939. In 1934, he published a study in the British journal, Nature , on "The Partnership between Fish and Anemone". Gohar's eight-year research on
72-454: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Hamid, Iran (disambiguation) (Redirected from Hamid, Iran (disambiguation) ) Hamid (Persian: حميد ) may refer to: Hamid, Abadan , Khuzestan Province Hamid, Shushtar , Khuzestan Province Hamid, North Khorasan Hamid, West Azerbaijan Hamid, Mahabad , West Azerbaijan Province [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
84-4226: The Arabic triconsonantal root of Ḥ-M-D ( ح-م-د ): Ḥāmed ( Arabic : حَامِد ḥāmid ) also spelled Haamed , Hamid or Hamed , and in Turkish Hamit ; it means "lauder" or "one who praises". Ḥamīd ( Arabic : حَمِيد ḥamīd ) also spelled Hamid , or Hameed , in Turkish is Hamit , and in Azeri is Həmid or Һәмид ; it means "lauded" or "praiseworthy". Given name [ edit ] Hamid [ edit ] Hamid Ahmadi (historian) (b. 1945), Iranian historian Hamid Ahmadi (futsal) (b. 1988), Iranian futsal player Hamid Ahmadieh (born 1953), Iranian ophthalmologist and medical scientist Hamid Al Shaeri (b. 1961), Egyptian-Libyan singer, songwriter, and musician Hamid Arasly (1902–1983), Azeri and Soviet scientist Hamid Arzulu (b. 1937), Azerbaijani poet and writer Hamid Idris Awate (1910–1962), Eritrean guerrilla commander Hamid Berhili (b. 1964), Moroccan boxer Hamid Mahmood Butt , Pakistani ophthalmologist Hamid Chitchian (b. c. 1957 ), Iranian politician Hamid Drake (b. 1955), American musician Hamid Etemad (b. 1945), Iranian professor Hamid Frangieh (1907–1981), Lebanese politician Hamid Gabbay (b. c. 1943 ), Iranian-born American architect Hamid Ghandehari , Iranian-American drug chemist Hamid Gul (1936–2015), Pakistani politician Hamid Guska (b. 1953), head coach of Bosnian national boxing team Hamid Hassani (b. 1968), Iranian lexicographer Hamid Ismailov (b. 1954), Uzbek journalist Hamid Karzai (b. 1957), President of Afghanistan from 2002 to 2014 Hamid Merakchi (1976-2024), Algerian footballer Hamid Hussain Musavi (1830-1888), Indian scholar Hamid Notghi (1920–1999), Iranian Azeri poet, writer, author, university professor Hamid Olimjon (1909–1944), Uzbek poet and scholar Hamid Ekrem Šahinović (1879/1882–1936), Bosnian writer and dramatist Hamid Naderi Yeganeh (b. 1990), Iranian mathematical artist Hamed / Hameed [ edit ] Hamed Gohar (1907–1992), Egyptian oceanographer Hamed Haddadi (b. 1985), Iranian basketball player Hamed Haghshenas (b. 1994), Iranian para taekwondo practitioner Hameed Haroon , Pakistani economist Hamed Namouchi (b. 1984), Tunisian footballer Hameed Nizami (1915–1962), Pakistani journalist Hamed Rasouli (b. 1985), Iranian footballer Hamed Sohrabnejad (b. 1983), Iranian basketball player Hamed Traorè (b. 2000), Ivorian footballer Middle name [ edit ] Abed Hamed Mowhoush (1947-2003), Iraqi general Awad Hamed al-Bandar (1945–2007), Iraqi chief judge Mohammad Hamid Ansari (b. 1937), vice-president of India Surname [ edit ] For people called Abdul Hamid , see Abdul Hamid (name) . Alejandro Hamed (1934–2023), Paraguayan diplomat and Arabist Amir Hamed (1962–2017), Uruguayan writer and translator Amr Hamed (d. 1998), Canadian terrorist Ezzedin Yacoub Hamed , Egyptian Long Jumper Haseeb Hameed (b. 1997), English cricketer Ibrahim Hamed , Hamas military commander Mohsin Hamid (b. 1971), Pakistani British author Jasmin Hamid (born 1984), Finnish actress Mohamed Naguib Hamed (born 1962), Egyptian athlete Naseem Hamed (b. 1974), British boxer Nima Arkani-Hamed (b. 1972), Iranian-American-Canadian theoretical physicist Rani Hamid (b. 1944), Bangladeshi chess player Sanaa Ismail Hamed (b. 1984), Egyptian model Taha Bidaywi Hamed , Iraqi politician Yasmeen Hameed (born 1952), Pakistani Urdu poet Zid Abou Hamed (b. 1970), Australian athlete See also [ edit ] Abu Hamid Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Al-Ghazali Persian theologian, philosopher, jurist Al Hamed , town in Egypt near Rosetta Hameed
96-697: The Egyptian University was established). Gohar first joined the Faculty of Medicine in Cairo University , and despite his excellent success in the preparatory year, he later chose to transfer to the Faculty of Sciences. From there, he obtained a Bachelor of Science with first class honors, and was appointed as a teaching assistant in the Department of Animal Sciences at the college. In 1931, two years after his graduation, he submitted his first thesis to obtain
108-427: The play Al Ayal Kibrit ( The Kids Have Grown Up ) during his phone call to his father, Ramadan Al-Sukari, to inform him of the kidnapping of his son Atef. This article about an Egyptian scientist is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Egyptian biographical article related to television is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This biographical article about an oceanographer
120-775: The same given name . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hamid&oldid=1258113089 " Categories : Given names Arabic-language surnames Arabic-language masculine given names Masculine given names Bosniak masculine given names Bosnian masculine given names Iranian masculine given names Pakistani masculine given names Names of God in Islam Hidden categories: Pages with Arabic IPA Pages with Urdu IPA Articles containing Arabic-language text Articles with short description Short description
132-476: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hamid,_Iran&oldid=1256455030 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Persian-language text Short description
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#1732855097559144-594: The soft corals in Hurghada earned him a D.Sc. from Cambridge - considered the highest recognition open to unsupervised research. Hamed Abdel Fattah Gohar was born in Cairo on November 15, 1907. He received his primary education at the Islamic Charitable Society School, and his secondary education at the Royal Secondary School, from which he obtained his baccalaureate degree in 1925 (the year
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