thumb|right|200px|Kur coat of arms used by some of Kurek family Kurski (feminine: Kurska) is a Polish surname. It may be transliterated as Kursky or Kurskaya. Some of them use Kur, Ossorya, Prawdzic or Rogala coat of arms. == People == Notable people with the surname include: Anna Kurska (1929–2016), Polish politician and lawyer Dmitry Kursky (1874–1932), Soviet Commissar for Justice (1918–1928) Jacek Kurski (born 1966), Polish politician and journalist (born 1963), Polish journalist and columnist, deputy editor-in-chief of "Gazeta Wyborcza" (died 1681) – Polish Catholic priest, Bernard
thumb|right|200px|Kur coat of arms used by some of Kurek family Kurski (feminine: Kurska) is a Polish surname. It may be transliterated as Kursky or Kurskaya. Some of them use Kur, Ossorya, Prawdzic or Rogala coat of arms. == People == Notable people with the surname include: Anna Kurska (1929–2016), Polish politician and lawyer Dmitry Kursky (1874–1932), Soviet Commissar for Justice (1918–1928) Jacek Kurski (born 1966), Polish politician and journalist (born 1963), Polish journalist and columnist, deputy editor-in-chief of "Gazeta Wyborcza" (died 1681) – Polish Catholic priest, Bernardine, Bishop of Bacău, Archdeacon of Pszczew
== Places == Kursky District, Kursk Oblast Kursky District, Stavropol Krai Kursky Rail Terminal, a rail terminal in Moscow, Russia Kurskaya (Koltsevaya line), a station of Koltsevaya line of the Moscow Metro Kurskaya (Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line), a station of the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line of the Moscow Metro Kurskaya oblast or Kursk Oblast, a federal subject of Russia Kursky (rural locality), a list of rural localities in Russia Kursky, Republic of Adygea
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).