Din
Din stands for:
- Welsh version of the dun
- Dīn , Arabic for "belief"
- Din (Kabbalah) , one of the ten Sephiroth in Kabbalah
People:
- Abd ar-Razzaq Muhyi ad-Din (1910–1983), Iraqi poet and politician
- Ahmad Fuad Muhi ad-Din (1926–1984), Egyptian politician, Prime Minister
- Claire Din (* 1958), German lyricist
- Jalal ad-Din († 1231), Khorezm Shah
- Jamal ad-Din (Honavar) , Sultan of Honavar in what is now Karnataka, India
- Jamal ad-Din (astronomer) , astronomer
- Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani (1838–1897), Islamic reformer, one of the founders of Islamic modernism
- Jamal ad-Din Abd al-Karim ad-Dabban (~ 1939–2007), Sunni clergyman
- Hamza El Din (1929-2006), Nubian oud player and singer
- Kyaw Din (1900–?), Burmese football pioneer
- Nazīra Zain ad-Dīn (1908–1976), Lebanese-Syrian suffragette and feminist
- Nur ad-Din (1118–1174), Syrian regent 1146–1174
- Raschīd ad-Dīn (1247-1318), Persian vizier
- Raschid al-Din (1133 / 1135–1193), sect leader of the Shiite assassins
- Safi Al Din (1252-1334), Iranian clergyman
- Sherif Baha El Din (* 1960), Egyptian herpetologist, ornithologist and conservationist
- Yahya Muhammad Hamid ad-Din (1869–1948), Imam and King of Yemen 1904–1948
- Yousef Gamal El-Din (* 1985), Egyptian-Swiss journalist and moderator
DIN stands as an abbreviation for:
- German Institute for Standardization , the national standards organization
- Democrats i Norge , Norwegian party
- DIN standard (formerly German industrial standard )
- DIN font , see DIN 1451
- Dien Bien Phu Airport , Vietnam (IATA code)
as a distinguishing mark on license plates:
- Germany: Wesel district (for Dinslaken)
din stands for:
- Dinka (language) (ISO-639-2 code), West Nilotic language of the Dinka in South Sudan
See also: