Glaser is a surname that is derived from the occupation of the glazier, or glass cutter.
Glaser is a surname that is derived from the occupation of the glazier, or glass cutter.
==Notable persons with this surname== Albrecht Glaser (born 1942), German politician Barney Glaser (1930–2022), American sociologist Benny Glaser (born 1989), World Series of Poker multiple event winner Chris Glaser (activist), writer and minister of religion Chris Glaser (American football) (born 1999), American football player Christopher Glaser (1615 – c. 1670), Swiss chemist Daniel Glaser, Deputy Assistant Secretary in the US Department of Treasury Donald A. Glaser (1926–2013), Nobel prize winner in physics Eduard Glaser (1855–1908), Austrian Arabist and archaeologist Elizabeth Glaser (1947–1994), American AIDS activist Elizabeth Glaser (artist) (fl. 1815–1830), American folk artist Emmanuel Glaser (born 1964), French Lawyer Franjo Glaser (1913–2003), Croatian footballer Georg K. Glaser (1910–1995), German writer Joe Glaser (1896–1969), American talent agent Johann Glaser (1629–1675), Swiss anatomist Judith E. Glaser, American author and businessperson Julius Anton Glaser (1831–1885), Austrian jurist and politician Karina Yan Glaser (born 1979 or 1980), American author Milton Glaser (1929–2020), American graphic designer Nikki Glaser (born 1984), American television host of Not Safe with Nikki Glaser Paul Michael Glaser (born 1943), American actor Peter Glaser (1923–2014), American scientist Peter Gläser (1949–2008), German musician Petr Glaser (born 1988), Czech footballer Rob Glaser (born 1962), founder of RealNetworks, Inc. Robert Glaser (1921–2012), educational psychologist Ronald Gläser (born 1973), German politician Vera Glaser (1916–2008), American journalist and feminist Vladimir Jurko Glaser (1924–1984), Croatian theoretical physicist Werner Wolf Glaser (1910–2006), German-born Swedish composer, musician, and poet Tompall & the Glaser Brothers, American country music vocal trio Jim Glaser (1937–2019) Tompall Glaser (1933–2013)
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).