Anup (Sanskrit: अनुप anūpa) is an Indian masculine given name. The Sanskrit word anūpa has the following meanings: 'watery', 'situated near the water', 'bank of a river', 'pond', 'lagoon'. The meaning of the name “Anup” is: "Incomparable, unequalled; unique; pond.[1][2]
Notable people
Anup
- Anup Baral (born 1968), actor, writer, director of Nepal
 - Anup Bhandari, writer, director, music director, lyricist and actor who works primarily in Kannada cinema
 - Anup Chetia (real name Golap Baruah), General Secretary of the banned United Liberation Front of Assam in Assam
 - Anup Singh Choudry (born 1949), Sikh writer formerly based in the United Kingdom who was also a justice of the High Court of Uganda
 - Anup Das (born 1964), Indian former cricketer
 - Anup Dave (born 1981), Indian first-class cricketer who represented Rajasthan
 - Anup D'Costa (born 1993), Indian volleyball player
 - Anup Ghatak (1941–2013), Indian cricketer
 - Anup Ghoshal (1945–2023), singer in Hindi films and other vernacular Indian films
 - Anup Jalota (born 1953), Indian singer/musician, best known for his performances of the bhajan and the ghazal
 - Anup Kaphle, Nepali journalist, editor-in-chief of Rest of World
 - Anup Kumar (actor) (1932–1997), actor from India
 - Anup Kumar (kabaddi), Indian professional Kabaddi player and Coach
 - Anup Kumar (politician), Fiji Indian politician who won the Vanua Levu West Indian Communal Constituency
 - Anup Kumar Saha, member of the Parliament of India
 - Anup Kumar Yama (born 1984), Indian Roller Skate Athlete
 - Anup Menon or Anoop Menon, Indian film actor, screenwriter and lyricist
 - Anup Mishra or Anoop Mishra (born 1956), Indian politician from the Bharatiya Janata Party
 - Anup Nathu (born 1960), New Zealand cricketer
 - Anup Chandra Pandey (born 1959), retired Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer
 - Anup Paul, English singer, songwriter, producer, engineer, mixer and recording artist from Rayners Lane, United Kingdom
 - Anup Phukan, former member of Asom Gana Parishad politician from Assam
 - Anup Rai, Bargujar Rajput nobleman in seventeenth century India, courtier of the Mughal emperor, Jahangir
 - Anup Revanna, Indian actor who works in Kannada cinema
 - Anup Rubens, born Enoch Rubens, Indian film music composer who predominantly works in Telugu cinema
 - Anup Kumar Saha (born 1956), Indian politician and former Member of Parliament
 - Anup Sengupta, Bengali film director and producer
 - Anup Raj Sharma, the Chief Justice of Nepal from 11 February to 25 March 2010
 - Anup Singh (filmmaker) (born 1961), Geneva based filmmaker
 - Anup Singh (politician) (1903–1969), Indian politician from Punjab
 - Anup Singh of Bikaner (1638–1698), ruler of Bikaner State during 1669–1698
 - Anup Singh Choudry (born 1950), Sikh writer and businessman, now a High Court judge in Uganda
 - Anup Soni (born 1965), Indian film and television actor
 - Anup Sridhar (born 1983), male badminton player from India
 - Anup Mathew Thomas (born 1977), visual artist who lives and works in Bangalore
 - Anup Upadhyay, Indian actor, known for his work in serials
 - Anup Wadhawan, the Commerce Secretary for the Government of India
 - Anup Lal Yadav (1923–2013), Indian politician
 - Anup Kumar Yama (born 1984), Indian roller skate athlete
 
Anoop kumar singh bhumihar brahman
- Anoop Desai (born 1986), American singer-songwriter
 - Anoop Jacob (born 1977), Indian politician
 - Anoop Kumar (1929–1997), Indian actor
 - Anoop Kumar Mittal (born 1960), Indian engineer
 - Anoop Malhotra (born 1955), Indian general
 - Anoop Menon (born 1977), Indian actor
 - Anoop Suri (born 1971), Indian hotel manager
 - Anoop Swarup (born 1959), Indian academic
 
See also
- Anup Kumar (disambiguation)
 - Anup Nagar, census town in West Bengal, India
 - Anupa
 - All pages with titles containing Anup
 - All pages with titles containing Anoop
 
References
- ↑ "'Sanskrit dictionary for spoken Sanskrit'". Retrieved 2016-03-26.
 - ↑ Monier-Williams, Monier (1899). A Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo-European Languages. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 685239912.
 
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