Skip to content
Category

Surnames

page 6
Valdo
Notable people with the name Valdo include:
Rodríguez
family name
Turunen
Turunen is a Finnish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Kissling
Kissling is a German language surname. it may refer to:
Gurvich
Gurvich, Gurovich, Gurwich, Gurwitch, Gurwitsch, Gurevich, or Gourevitch is a Yiddish surname, a Russian form of the surname "Horowitz", see the latter article about its etymology.
Bertold
Bertold is a given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include:
Sklar
Sklar or Sklyar is a Ukrainian and Belarusian surname meaning "glassmaker". Notable people with the surname include:
Fei
Chinese family name (费/費)
McGovern
McGovern may refer to the following:
Armstrong
family name
Bertha
Bertha is a female Germanic name, from Old High German berhta meaning "bright one". It was usually a short form of Anglo Saxon names Beorhtgifu meaning "bright gift" or Beorhtwynn meaning "bright joy".
Pinel
Pinel is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Paltrow
Paltrow is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Lee
family name
Weidmann
Weidmann is a German surname derived from the meaning "hunter". Notable people with the surname include:
Santos
family name
Bartel
Bartel is a given name and surname. Notable people with the name include:
Mellor
Mellor is an English surname.
McKeon
McKeon and MacKeon are Irish surnames originating both from the Gaelic Mac Eoghain ("Son of Eoghan") and Mac Eoin ("Son of John"), which are pronounced identically. Other variants in English include MacEoin and McKeown. Notable people with the name include:
Pinto
Pinto is a Portuguese surname. It is a high-frequency surname in all Portuguese-speaking countries and is also widely present in Spanish-speaking countries, Italy, India (especially in Mangalore, Karnataka), France and Israel.
Atiyah
Atiyyah ( ‘aṭiyyah), which generally implies "something (money or goods given as regarded) received as a gift" or also means "present, gift, benefit, boon, favor, granting, giving".
Timon
Timon is a masculine given name and a surname which may refer to:
Nyman
Nyman is an English and Swedish surname. The name originates from Anglo-Saxon culture. The name is derived from the words neowe, niwe, and nige which all mean new, and the word mann, meaning man. The name was traditionally given to newcomers. Other variations of the surname include: Newman, Newmen, and Newmin. People with this surname include:
Sofie
Sofie is a feminine given name and a surname. Notable bearers of the name include:
Blokhin
Blokhin (, ) might refer to one of the following: People Alexander Viktorovich Blokhin (born 1951), Russian diplomat Alexis Blokhina (born 2004), American tennis player Iryna Blokhina (born 1983), Ukrainian singer and poet, daughter of Oleh Blokhin (1912 - 1993), Soviet surgeon and oncologist Oleg Blokhin (born 1952), Soviet and Ukrainian football coach Oleh Olehovych Blokhin (born 1980), Ukrainian football player Sofia Blokhin (born 2006), Estonian chess player Tatyana Blokhina (born 1970), Russian heptathlete Vasili Blokhin (1895–1955), chief executioner during Stalin's purges Yevg
Martine
Martine is a feminine given name and a surname.
Gómez
Gómez (frequently anglicized as Gomez) is a common Spanish patronymic surname of Germanic origin meaning "son of Gome". The Portuguese and Old Galician version is Gomes, while the Catalan form is Gomis. The given name Gome is derived from the Visigothic word guma, "man", with multiple Germanic cognates with the same meaning (Old English guma, Middle English gome/gomo, High Old German gomo, Middle High German gome), which are related to Latin homo, "man". __NOTOC__
Rogers
family name
Lachmann
Lachmann (also Lachman, Lachemann, Lackman, or Lackmann) is a family name of German origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Orbach
Orbach is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Krishnamurti
( ) is a South Indian name. It has several variants.
Alves
Alves is a surname that appears to originate both from Portugal and Scotland (in Scotland where a variation of the name can appear as Alvis). It is debatable whether the surname appeared first in one country or the other, since it is more prevalent in Portugal, but registered as far back as the 13th century in the church records at Alves, Moray, Northern Scotland. If from Portugal, it will have originated from the Germanic patronym son of Álvaro (Alvar, Alvarus).
Gheorghiu
Gheorghiu () is a Romanian surname, of Greek language origin, deriving from Greek Γεωργίου. Among Greeks, the Greek surname form Γεωργίου is usually or always Romanized in other ways, either as Gheorghiou or Georgiou.
Mommsen
Mommsen is a surname, and may refer to one of a family of German historians, see Mommsen family:
Kovalchuk
Kovalchuk (Ukrainian and Russian: Ковальчук), Kavalchuk (), Kowalczuk, Later Kovalčuk (Polish), Covalciuc (Romanian), also transliterated as Kowalchuk (in the North American diaspora), is a common East Slavic surname (one of the most popular in Ukraine). The Kovalchuk name extends back to before 1500 AD in Kievan Rus.
Gibbons
family name
Takeda
or is a Japanese family name. Throughout the course of the Sengoku period (16th century) of Japan, the famed Takeda clan of Kai Province had many descendant branch families.
Wertheimer
Wertheimer is an Ashkenazi Jewish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Yordanov
Yordanov () (masculine) or Yordanova () (feminine) popular surnames in Bulgaria. People commonly known by their family name Yordanov include:
Hine
Hine is a surname deriving from Middle English.
Tanner
family name
Ja'far
Jafar (), meaning in Arabic "stream", is a masculine name of Arabic origin, common among middle eastern and Muslim men, especially in Iran.
Wright
Wright is an occupational surname originating in England and Scotland. The term 'Wright' comes from the circa 700 AD Old English word wryhta or wyrhta, meaning "worker or shaper of wood". Later, the word referred to any occupational worker and came to be used as a surname.
Kurochkin
Kurochkin () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Kurochkina. It may refer to Evgeny Kurochkin (1940–2011), Russian paleornithologist Kirill Kurochkin (born 1988), Russian football player Nikolai Kurochkin (1830–1884), Russian poet, editor, translator and essayist Olesya Kurochkina (born 1983), Russian football striker Pavel Kurochkin (1900–1989), Soviet general Vasily Kurochkin (1831–1875), Russian satirical poet, journalist and translator Victoria Kurochkina (born 1992), Russian water polo player Vladimir Kurochkin (1829–1885), Russian dramatist, translator, editor a
Marcus
male given name
Turner
family name
Eötvös
Eötvös is a Hungarian surname. It is derived from an old spelling of the Hungarian word ötvös, meaning "gold- and silversmith". __NOTOC__
Schütz
Schütz (also spelled Schuetz without Umlaut ü) is a German surname, deriving from Schütze (shooter/marksman). Notable people with the surname include:
Yermolayev
Yermolayev (, , masculine) and Yermolayeva (; feminine) is an East Slavic patronymic surname. Yermolayev is derived from the given name Yermolay (or Ermolai, Ermolay, Yermolai; ), which was from the Greek Hermolaos, meaning "the people of Hermes".
Dieudonné
Dieudonné is a French name normally meaning "Gift of God", and thus similar to the Greek-derived Theodore, Hebrew-derived Matthew, or the Spanish Diosdado. It may refer to:
Diaby
Diaby is a surname, and may refer to:
Masaryk
Masaryk is a Slovak surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Philidor family
Philidor (Filidor) or Danican Philidor was a family of musicians that served as court musicians to the French kings. The original name of the family was Danican (D'Anican) and was of Scottish origin (Duncan). Philidor was a later addition to the family name, given first to Michel the elder by Louis XIII because his oboe playing reminded the king of an Italian virtuoso oboist named Filidori. Both Michel the younger and Jean played in the Grande Écurie (literally, the Great Stable; figuratively, the Military Band) in Paris. Later members of the family were known as composers as well. One of them
Hayashi
Hayashi (林, literally "woods"), is the 19th most common Japanese surname. It shares the same character as the Chinese surname Lin and the Korean surname Im.
Stevenson
Stevenson is an English language patronymic surname meaning "son of Steven". Its first historical record is from pre-10th-century England. Another origin of the name is as a toponymic surname related to the place Stevenstone in Devon, England. There are variant spellings of the name, including Stephenson.
Göbel
Göbel is a surname of Germanic origin. Persons with this name include:
Metternich
Wikimedia disambiguation page
Avramović
Avramović () is a Serbian surname derived from a masculine given name Avram, and may refer to:
Hopkins
Hopkins is an English and Welsh patronymic surname derived from the personal name Hopkin and the genitive ending -s. Hopkin is itself a pet form of the name Hobb, a shortening of Robert (with alteration of the initial consonant). Notable people and characters with the surname include:
Burman
Burman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: