thumb|right|200px|Antoniewicz coat of arms used by some of Antoniewicz family Antoniewicz is a Polish surname. It derived from the Antonius (Anton, Antoni) root name. Archaic feminine forms are Antoniewiczowa (by husband), Antoniewiczówna (by father); they still can be used colloquially. Some of them use Antoniewicz or Hełm coat of arms. It may be transliterated as: Antonewycz, Antonevych, Antonevich, Антоне́вич, Антоневич, Антаневіч, Antonievičius, Անտոնևիչ. Notable people with this surname include the following:
thumb|right|200px|Antoniewicz coat of arms used by some of Antoniewicz family Antoniewicz is a Polish surname. It derived from the Antonius (Anton, Antoni) root name. Archaic feminine forms are Antoniewiczowa (by husband), Antoniewiczówna (by father); they still can be used colloquially. Some of them use Antoniewicz or Hełm coat of arms. It may be transliterated as: Antonewycz, Antonevych, Antonevich, Антоне́вич, Антоневич, Антаневіч, Antonievičius, Անտոնևիչ. Notable people with this surname include the following: (1858–1922), Polish historian and art theorist (1919–1970), Polish historian and archaeologist Heiko Antoniewicz (born 1965), German chef Karol Antoniewicz (1807–1852), Polish Jesuit Michał Antoniewicz (1897–1989), Polish equestrian Michaił Antoniewicz (1912–2003), Soviet football player and coach (1840–1919), Galician social activist, historian, educator, member of the Diet of Galicia and Lodomeria (1801–1885), Polish poet, playwright, translator and cavalry officer of the Polish Army in the November Uprising Włodzimierz Antoniewicz (1893–1973), Polish archaeologist
==Fictional character== Mr. Antoniewicz, The Icarus Hunt villain
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).