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341 surnames in our directory
Pulkrábková is a Czech surname, serving as the feminine form of Pulkrábek. Both names are derived from the Czech medieval title purkrabí, which itself comes from the German Burggraf, meaning "burgrave". A burgrave was a...
Řeha is a Czech surname derived from the given name Řehoř, which is the Czech form of Gregory. The surname thus belongs to the large family of patronymic surnames that developed in the Czech lands during the late Middle...
Řehová is a Czech feminine surname derived from the masculine name Řeha. The suffix -ová is a typical Czech feminine ending added to surnames. This naming pattern is standard in Czech and other Slavic languages, where fe...
Etymology and MeaningŘezníček is a Czech surname, a diminutive of Řezník, meaning "little butcher." Based on the occupational surname Řezník, which derives from the Czech word for a butcher who slaughters animals for mea...
Řezníčková is the feminine form of the Czech surname Řezníček (meaning "little butcher"), from the Czech word řezník ("butcher"). While Řezníček is the masculine base used for males, Řezníčková attaches a common Slavic f...
Řezník is a Czech surname, derived from the occupational term for "butcher." As a common occupational surname in Czech-speaking regions, it falls into the category of names that originally identified individuals by their...
Řezníková is a Czech surname. It is the feminine form of Řezník, which means "butcher" in the Czech language.Etymology and OriginThe name Řezník derives from the Czech noun řezník ("butcher"), akin to the verb řezat ("to...
Růžička is a Czech surname, with the feminine form Růžičková. It is a diminutive of růže, meaning "rose," and thus translates to "little rose." The Slovak variant is Ružička (feminine Ružičková). Etymology The surname be...
Růžičková is the feminine form of the Czech surname Růžička, meaning "little rose" in Czech. It is a diminutive derived from růže ("rose"), a common floral element in Slavic surnames. The name is found primarily in Czech...
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....
Rybář is a Czech surname meaning "fisherman". It is derived from the noun ryba ("fish"), making it an occupational name for someone who worked as a fisherman. The surname is the Czech cognate of the Slovak Rybár, and sha...
Rybářová is a Czech surname. It is the feminine form of the Czech masculine surname Rybář, which itself originates from a Slavic occupational name meaning "fisher".EtymologyThe root of this surname is the Slovak term ryb...
Rybová is a Czech feminine surname, derived as a feminine form of Ryba. The root name Ryba means "fish" in both Polish and Czech, indicating an occupational surname for a fisher or fishmonger. The feminine suffix -ová is...
Schovajsa is a Czech surname of Moravian origin, derived from the imperative phrase schovaj se, meaning "hide yourself." This type of surname is known as a nickname surname, originating from a characteristic or a command...
Schovajsová is the feminine form of the Czech surname Schovajsa. The root surname derives from the Czech imperative phrase schovej se, meaning "hide yourself," pointing to a probable origin as a nickname or an evocative...
Sedláček is a Czech and Slovak surname. It is a diminutive form of Sedlák, meaning "little farmer" or "son of a farmer." The suffix -ek (or feminine -ková) is common in Slavic surnames and indicates a smaller or younger...
Sedláčková is a Czech and Slovak surname, the feminine form of Sedláček. As is common in Slavic languages, the suffix -ová added to the masculine stem indicates a female bearer. Thus, Sedláčková is the surname for a woma...
EtymologySedlák is a Czech and Slovak surname meaning "farmer" or "peasant farmer". Historically, it referred to a freeman farmer who owned a relatively sizable amount of land – more than a Zahradník (gardener) or a Chal...
Sedláková is the feminine form of the Czech and Slovak surname Sedlák, and it functions as a matronymic surname for women in accordance with Czech and Slovak naming conventions. The root name Sedlák is an occupational su...
Ševčík is a common occupational surname of Czech and Slovak origin. It is derived from the word švec, meaning "shoemaker" or "cobbler" — a trade that was widespread in medieval Central Europe. As a patronymic or identify...
Ševčíková is a Czech and Slovak surname, the feminine form of Ševčík. It belongs to a widespread family of Slavic occupational surnames derived from the word for "shoemaker" or "cobbler," ultimately rooted in the Czech a...
Šimek is a Czech, Slovak, and Croatian surname that originated as a patronymic, derived from the given name Šimon, the local form of Simon meaning "hearing" or "listening." Etymology and Origins The surname Šimka is a di...
Šimková is a feminine Czech and Slovak surname. It is the feminine form of the surnames Šimek and Šimko, which are derived from the given name Šimon, the Czech and Slovak form of Simon.EtymologyThe surname Šimková ultima...
Šimonová is a Czech and Slovak surname derived as the feminine form of Šimon. Šimon itself is the Czech and Slovak form of the given name Simon, which ultimately traces back to the Hebrew Shimʿon, meaning “hearing, liste...
Skála is a Czech surname derived from the word skála, meaning "rock." It typically originated as a topographic name for someone who lived near a prominent rock or rocky area. The name is part of a broader family of Slavi...
Skalická is the feminine form of the Skalický surname, predominantly found in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The masculine base, Skalický, is a topographic or habitational name meaning that the original bearer came fro...
Skalický (masculine form; feminine: Skalická) is a Czech and Slovak surname that originated as a toponymic surname, indicating that the original bearer came from a place named Skalice, Skalica or Skalička. These place na...
Skálová is the feminine form of the Czech surname Skála. The name Skála itself means "rock" in Czech, indicating that the original bearer lived near a prominent rock or rocky area. As a customary pattern in Czech and oth...
Slavík is a common Czech surname meaning "nightingale" in the Czech language. It belongs to a category of European surnames derived from bird names, which often originated as nicknames for someone with a fine singing voi...
Slavíková is a Czech feminine surname, derived from the masculine form Slavík, which means "nightingale" in Czech. The suffix -ová is a standard feminine ending in Czech surnames, indicating that the bearer is female. Th...
Slezák is a Czech and Slovak surname denoting a person from Silesia, a historical region now spanning parts of Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic. The name derives from the Czech toponym slezsko (Silesia) or the Slo...
Slezáková is the feminine form of the Czech and Slovak surname Slezák, which originated as a regional name for a person from Silesia. Silesia (Czech: Slezsko; Slovak: Sliezsko) is a historical region spanning southwester...
Slováček is a Czech and Slovak surname, representing a diminutive or variant form of Slovák. The root name Slovák originally described someone who was from Slovakia, designating a person of Slovak origin or background.Th...
Slováčková is a Czech feminine surname, derived as the feminine form of the masculine surname Slováček. The suffix -ová is a standard Czech ending used to form female surnames from their male counterparts, indicating the...
Slovák is a surname of Czech and Slovak origin, meaning "Slovak" in the Slovak language. It originally described one who came from Slovakia or was of Slovak ethnicity. This type of surname is classified as an ethnic name...
Slováková is a feminine surname of Czech and Slovak origin. It is the feminine form of the surname Slovák. The root name Slovák originally described someone who was from Slovakia, deriving from the ethnic term "Slovák,"...
Smola is a Czech surname formed as a variant of Smolak. Smolak itself is an occupational name for a distiller of pitch, derived from the Old Slavic word smola meaning "pitch, resin". The name thus originally referred to...
Smolová is the feminine form of the Czech surname Smola. It is a common Czech surname pattern where the suffix -ová is added to the masculine base to indicate a female bearer, with Smola itself being a variant of the occ...
Etymology and OriginsSokolová is the feminine form of Sokol, a surname derived from the Slavic word for falcon. In Czech and Slovak usage, the suffix -ová indicates a matronymic or possessive form, often applied to women...
Souček is a Czech surname. It is a diminutive of the older Czech surname Suk, from the word suk meaning "tree knot" or "gnarl." The name may have originated as a topographic name for someone who lived near a distinctive...
Součková is a Czech feminine surname, derived as the feminine form of Souček. The root name Souček itself is a diminutive of the Czech surname Suk, which originates from the word suk meaning "tree knot" or "gnarl." This...
Soukup is a Czech occupational surname, derived from the term meaning "co-buyer" – a partner in purchasing goods. Originally, it referred to a merchant or someone involved in trade, often as a member of a trading guild o...
Soukupová is the feminine form of the Czech occupational surname Soukup. The masculine root Soukup derives from the Czech word for a co-buyer or partner in a trade venture, ultimately from soukupit meaning “to buy togeth...
Staněk is a Czech surname derived from a diminutive of the given name Stanislav. The root name Stanislav is composed of the Slavic elements stati "stand, become" and slava "glory", thus meaning "one who becomes glorious"...
Staňková is a feminine Czech surname, deriving from the masculine form Staněk. Staněk itself is a diminutive of the given name Stanislav, which originates from the Slavic elements stati meaning "stand, become" and slava...
Stárek is a Czech surname derived from a nickname based on the Czech adjective starý, meaning "old." The surname thus originally denoted an older person or perhaps someone who acted wise beyond their years.Etymology and...
Stárková is a Czech feminine surname, derived as a feminized form of Stárek. The root surname Stárek originates from a nickname based on the Czech adjective starý, meaning “old.”In Czech naming conventions, the suffix -o...
Šťastná is the feminine form of the Czech and Slovak surname Šťastný, which literally means "happy" in Czech. The surname is relatively common in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and its usage reflects a pattern in Slavi...
Šťastný is a Czech and Slovak surname meaning "happy". It derives from the Czech word šťastný which translates to "happy" or "fortunate" and has connections to given names formed from the Slavic element *sъčęstьje "happi...
Štěpánek is a Czech surname derived from a diminutive of the given name Štěpán, itself the Czech form of Stephen. The original name Stephen comes from the Greek Στέφανος (Stephanos) meaning "crown, wreath", or more preci...
Štěpánková is a Czech feminine surname, derived from the masculine form Štěpánek, which is a diminutive of the given name Štěpán, the Czech form of Stephen. The origin of the surname thus traces back to the Greek name Στ...
Strnad is a surname of Czech and Slovene origin, derived from the common name for the yellowhammer or bunting bird (Emberiza citrinella). In both languages, the word strnad directly refers to this small, brightly colored...
Strnadová is a Czech feminine surname derived from the masculine form Strnad, meaning "bunting (bird)" or "yellowhammer" in Czech and Slovene. The name is an ornithological reference to the small passerine bird of the ge...
Suchá is a feminine form of the Czech and Slovak surname Suchý, derived from the word "dry" (Czech suchý). This was originally a nickname for a thin person, metaphorically describing someone as "dry" or lean. Geographic...
Suchý is a Czech and Slovak surname derived from the adjective suchý, meaning "dry" in both languages. It likely originated as a nickname for a thin, lean person, evoking the notion of leanness or dryness, and by extensi...
Šulc is the Czech and Slovak form of the German occupational surname Schulz. Derived from Middle High German schultheiße, it originally denoted a "mayor" or "judge"—a village headman who collected taxes and presided over...
Šulcová is a Czech feminine surname, derived from the masculine form Šulc via the common Czech suffix -ová, which indicates a woman's surname. The root of the name is the German surname Schulz, itself originating from th...
Etymology and Historical OriginsThe surname Svoboda is of Czech origin, derived from the common noun svoboda meaning "freedom". In medieval Czech lands, this name was originally a byname for a freeman (a person who was n...
Svobodová is a Czech surname, serving as the feminine form of Svoboda. It is derived from the Czech word svoboda, meaning "freedom". This surname traces its origins to medieval times, when it was used to denote a freeman...
Sýkora is a Czech and Slovak surname meaning "tit (bird)" in both languages. The name refers to small passerine birds of the family Paridae, known as tits or chickadees, which are common across Europe. It originated as a...
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