Just because a question is simple doesn't mean it's clear. Under the general principle of Real Questions Have Answers, a clear question is one which can clearly be answered.
And this question doesn't really give any indication as to what would make an answer acceptable.
On the surface, it's just looking for "the titles of lady Fatimah". From the wikipedia link I provided in the comments, there's well over a hundred such titles. If OP is seeking a comprehensive list, it's not only a textbook example of "too broad," but one that's well-covered by an already existing resource.
And that's just for Shi'a titles. If, as suggested by the most recent edits, OP is seeking titles from both Shi'a and Sunni sources, that number may well be more, and would again still be "too broad".
Given that the only resources in the accepted answer are clearly Shi'a and not Sunni, and that it only provides a dozen or so titles, the idea that OP actually wants both Shi'a and Sunni resources is questionable. Or that OP even wants a comprehensive list.
But then that demands the question: What is OP looking for in an answer? What makes this answer useful in any way shape or form? What makes this answer acceptable?
Why do these dozen names get upvoted and accepted, when the dozen names posted by another user gets flagged for deletion? I don't know. The question provides absolutely no context in which to judge a good answer from a bad one.
Maybe one of the users who actually upvoted the question could clarify it for the rest of us, as they obviously felt that it showed research effort and was useful and clear. Or one of the users who actually upvoted the answer, since the only way they'd reasonably know the answer was useful is if they actually understood what the question was asking for.
These voters apparently understand the question better than I can, because as it stands it just looks like it's asking for a low-quality copy of an already-comprehensive Wikipedia page, which hardly seems of any value whatsoever to "experts in Islam, students of knowledge, and those interested in Islam on an academic level."
If that's what OP's actually asking for, it's pretty much a textbook example of the sort of boring trivial questions that drive away exactly the experts we need to make the site succeed.