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249 surnames in our directory
Nowicka is the feminine form of the Polish surname Nowicki. It is one of the many Slavic surnames that distinguish female bearers through the -a suffix, showing the gender of the person. Etymology The root name Nowicki i...
Nowicki is a Polish and Jewish surname, borne by many notable individuals across various fields. It is a habitational name, derived from the name of any of several towns in Poland called Nowice, which come from the Polis...
Olszewska is a Polish feminine surname, derived from the masculine form Olszewski. It is a toponymic name, meaning it originated from a place name—most likely one of the numerous locations called Olszewo, Olszew, Olszno,...
Olszewski is a Polish surname, ranking among the most common in Poland. Its feminine form is Olszewska, and the plural form is Olszewscy. The name is also found in alternative spelling Olszowski. In 2023, the Polish pers...
Ostrowska is the Polish feminine form of the surname Ostrowski, typically used by women as a married or hereditary surname in Poland. Etymology and Origin The root of the name is the Polish noun ostrów, meaning "river is...
Ostrowski (Polish pronunciation: [ɔsˈtrɔfskʲi]; feminine: Ostrowska; plural: Ostrowscy) is a Polish toponymic surname derived from the Polish word ostrów, meaning "river island" or "islet." As a toponymic surname, it was...
Pakulska is a Polish feminine surname, derived from the masculine form Pakulski. The surname Pakulski originally denoted a person from Pakuly, a place name in Poland. As is common in Polish onomastics, the feminine suffi...
Pakulski is a Polish surname, originally denoting a person from Pakuly, Poland. The suffix "-ski" is a common Slavic adjectival ending often associated with nobility or geographical origin, similar to the French "de" or...
Pasternack is an Americanized spelling of the surname Pasternak, which is widespread among Eastern European Jews and originated as an occupational or ornamental name. The root word means "parsnip" (Pastinaca sativa) in s...
Pasternak is a surname that derives from the Slavic word for "parsnip" (Pastinaca sativa), common in Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Hungarian, and Yiddish. The name ultimately comes from Latin pastinaca. The spe...
Paszek is a Polish surname derived from a diminutive of the given name Paweł, the Polish form of Paul. The etymology traces back to the Latin Paulus, meaning "small" or "humble," a name made famous by Saint Paul the Apos...
Pawlak is a Polish surname derived as a patronymic, meaning "son of Paweł." The root name Paweł is identical in meaning to the English name Paul, which has a rich history. Paul originates from the Latin family name Paulu...
Pawłowska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Pawłowski. It follows the typical Polish pattern where feminine surnames end in -ska (for adjectives) or -ówna (for nouns), though Pawłowska uses the adjectival -ska e...
Pawłowski (pronounced [paˈvwɔfski]; feminine: Pawłowska) is a Polish habitational surname, referring to someone from a town named Pawłowo, which itself derives from the given name Paweł (Polish for Paul). The root name P...
Piątek (pronounced [ˈpjɔntɛk]) is a Polish surname meaning "Friday", derived from the Polish word piąty meaning "fifth" (Friday being the fifth day of the week in some traditional reckonings). This surname is roughly ten...
Pietrzak is a Polish patronymic surname, reflecting descent from a father or ancestor named Piotr. The name is derived from the given name Piotr (the Polish form of Peter) with the addition of the suffix -ak, which in Po...
Piontek is a Polish surname that is a variant or alternate spelling of Piątek. Both spellings are pronounced identically in Polish (approximately [ˈpjɔntɛk]), but Piątek is the standard form. Piontek, as described in the...
Piotrowska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Piotrowski. It is borne by women and is common throughout Poland, reflecting the widespread usage of its masculine counterpart.EtymologyPiotrowski is a habitational n...
Piotrowski (Polish pronunciation: [pjɔˈtrɔvski]) is a Polish surname of habitational origin, derived from place names such as Piotrów, Piotrowo, or Piotrowice, which themselves come from the given name Piotr, the Polish...
Pokorny is the Polish form of the Pokorný surname. Derived from the Czech and Slovak adjective pokorný meaning "humble", it originated as a nickname for a modest, unassuming person. The Polish spelling Pokorny follows Po...
Popławska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Popławski. It is a habitational or toponymic surname derived from the Polish noun popław, meaning "flowing water" or "flood," which in turn comes from the verb płynąć...
Popławski is a Polish surname, derived from the adjective poplaw meaning "flowing water" or "flood." This toponymic or descriptive origin likely referred to individuals living near a river or floodplain, or it may have b...
Róg is a Polish surname that derives directly from the Polish common noun róg, meaning "animal horn." This origin places it within a well-known category of Slavic surnames that emerged from everyday objects, tools, or na...
Rudaski is a Polish surname with an interesting history. It is an Americanized variant of Rudawski, a toponymic name that indicated a person who lived near the Rudawa, a river in Poland. The original form, Rudawski>, der...
Rudawska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Rudawski. It is a toponymic surname, derived from the place name Rudawa, which is a river that flows near the city of Kraków in southern Poland. The name Rudawa itself...
Rudawski is a Polish topographic surname derived from the name of the Rudawa River, a watercourse in Poland. The addition of the suffix "-ski" indicates a connection to a place name, common in Polish surnames. Thus, Ruda...
Rusnak is a Polish surname meaning "Russian" (from a Polish term for a person from Russia or a Ruthenian). It is a regional and ethnic surname, often referring to individuals from the borderlands between Poland and the E...
Rutkowska is a Polish toponymic surname, the feminine form of Rutkowski. It originally denoted a person from one of several villages named Rutki or Rutkowo in Poland. Surnames ending in '-ska' (feminine) or '-ski' (mascu...
EtymologyRutkowski (feminine Rutkowska) is a Polish toponymic surname, originally denoting a person from the village of Rutki or Rutkowo. Rooted in the Polish placename Rutki (related to ruta, meaning "rue," a plant), th...
Ryba is a surname of Czech and Polish origin, derived directly from the word for "fish" (Polish ryba, Czech ryba). As an occupational name, it would have originally denoted a fisher or someone involved in the fish trade....
Sadowska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Sadowski, commonly used in Poland for women. While the masculine form often refers to origins from places like Sadowo or Sadowice, the feminine variant simply carries t...
Sadowski is a common Polish surname derived from place names such as Sadowo or Sadowice, which itself comes from the Polish word sad meaning "garden" or "orchard." The name thus denoted someone who lived near or was asso...
Sienkiewicz is a Polish patronymic surname derived from the given name Sienko, an old diminutive of Szymon. Thus, the name literally means “son of Sienko” or “descendant of Sienko.” Szymon is the Polish form of Simon, a...
Sierżant is a Polish cognate of the English surname Sergeant, derived from the Middle French sergent, meaning “servant,” ultimately from Latin servire “to serve.” As an occupational surname, Sierżant would have been used...
Sikora (Polish pronunciation: [ɕiˈkɔra]) is a surname of Polish origin. It is derived from the Polish word sikora, meaning "tit" (a bird belonging to the Paridae family). The name was originally used as a nickname for a...
Sitko is a Polish surname derived from the word sito, meaning "fine sieve," with the diminutive suffix -ko. It thus originally referred to a maker or seller of sieves, a craft that was essential in medieval and early mod...
Skała [ˈskawa] is a Polish topographic surname, a cognate of the Czech surname Skála. Both names derive from the Slavic word skała meaning “rock,” indicating the first bearers either lived near a prominent rock formation...
Śląska is a Polish feminine surname, the counterpart to the masculine form Śląski. Its origin lies in the root Slezák, a regional surname that originally identified a person from Silesia (Śląsk), a historical region curr...
Śląski is a Polish surname, a cognate of Slezák. The name is derived from a regional identifier, originally denoting a person from Silesia (Polish: Śląsk), a historical region now divided among Poland, Germany, and the C...
Ślązak is a Polish surname, technically a cognate of the Slezák surname found in Czech and Slovak. Fundamentally, it is an ethnic surname for a person from Silesia (Śląsk in Polish), a historical region now divided among...
Ślusarczyk is a Polish surname. It is a diminutive form of Ślusarski, which itself derives from the Polish word ślusarz meaning 'locksmith'. The root ślusarz is ultimately of Germanic origin, related to forms such as Ger...
Ślusarska is a Polish occupational surname, the feminine form of Ślusarski. Derived from the word ślusarz (locksmith), the name belongs to a common category of surnames that denote a person's trade or profession. The roo...
Ślusarski is a Polish occupational surname, derived from the word ślusarz, meaning 'locksmith'. The term ślusarz itself originates from the Old High German slōʒ (lock) and was adopted into Polish along with the trade. Th...
Smolak is a Polish occupational surname with a rich etymological foundation. The name originates from the Old Slavic word smola, meaning "pitch" or "resin," and it was historically given to individuals who worked as dist...
Smolarek is a Polish surname derived as a variant of Smolak, which itself is an occupational name for a distiller of pitch. The root comes from the Old Slavic word smola meaning "pitch, resin." The suffix -ek is a diminu...
Śniegowska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Śniegowski. Both surnames are derived from the Polish word śnieg, meaning "snow," likely originating as a nickname for someone with snow-white hair or a pale complexi...
EtymologyŚniegowski is a Polish surname derived from the word śnieg, meaning "snow". The suffix -owski is a common Polish patronymic and toponymic ending, often used to indicate a connection to a place or a characteristi...
Soból is a Polish surname. Its meaning can be understood as the Polish cognate of Sobol. The root name Sobol is an occupational surname for a fur trader, derived from the Slavic word sobolĭ meaning "sable" or "marten" —...
Sokal is a Polish surname that is a cognate of the name Sokol. While the surname itself is directly derived from the Polish word for "falcon" (sokół), the root name Sokol in Albanian also means "falcon", and was borrowed...
Sokół is a Polish surname derived from the common noun sokół, meaning falcon. It is thus the Polish cognate of the Slavic and Albanian name Sokol, which also means 'falcon'. The surname belongs to a widespread category o...
Sokołowska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Sokołowski. Both names are toponymic in origin, derived from any of several Polish towns called Sokołów or Sokołowo. These place names ultimately come from the Polish...
Sokołowski is a Polish toponymic surname, derived from the names of any of several places in Poland called Sokołów or Sokołowo. These place names themselves originate from the Polish word sokół, meaning "falcon"—a refere...
EtymologySówka is a diminutive of the Polish noun sowa, meaning "owl". As a surname, it likely originated as a nickname for someone who resembled an owl in appearance or behavior, such as having large eyes or a nocturnal...
EtymologyStanek is a Polish-language surname that originated as a diminutive of the given name Stanisław. The name Stanisław itself derives from the Slavic elements stati meaning "stand, become" (with inflected forms in...
Stankiewicz is a Polish and Belarusian surname derived from a diminutive of the given name Stanisław. The root Stanislav comes from the Slavic elements stati "stand, become" and slava "glory", thus meaning approximately...
Starek is a Polish surname derived from a nickname for an elderly person, originating from the Polish word stary meaning "old." The name thus belongs to a category of European surnames that reflect physical characteristi...
Starosta is a surname of Polish origin, derived from the Polish word meaning "mayor," "leader," or "elder." The term ultimately stems from the Slavic root star-, meaning "old" or "senior," and thus carries connotations o...
Stasiuk is a Ukrainian-language surname derived from a diminutive of the given name Stanislav. The root name Stanislav is composed of the Slavic elements stati (meaning "stand, become") and slava ("glory"). Thus, the sur...
Stawska is the feminine form of the Polish surname Stawski. The root name Stawski is derived from the Polish word staw, meaning "pond," and likely originated as a toponymic surname denoting someone who lived near or work...
Stawski is a Polish surname derived from the Polish noun staw meaning "pond". The name originally referred to someone who lived near a pond or who worked as a pond keeper. It follows the common Polish pattern of forming...
Showing 121 to 180 of 249 results
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