View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Surname] Re: Czech/Solvak/Polish
There are a couple of Passuths that come in when I google, Kriztina Passuth a Hungarian professor and Laszlo Passuth an author. I've come across the name Kossuth several times, which is why I focused on the 'suth'. Several other posters gave great suggestions on looking at parts of the name.
vote up1vote down

Replies

There is a surname, Passoth, which appears to be German. There are an estimated 200 people of that name in Germany, and something like 30 named Passuth. Of course the presence of both names could be a result of immigration, but there's also the possibility of a German origin for Passuth. Still no indication of meaning.
A lot of Hungarians had German surnames once, some still do. Same for the Czechs, though I'm not so sure about the Slovaks.
vote up1vote down
Thanks so much for all your effort! That is very interesting and I agree, there may be a German origin.
vote up1vote down
maybe jewish?? Pashut meand simple in hebrew and yiddish and i konw some Passuts in Haifa
vote up1vote down
Thats very interesting. Is the Haifa in or near Hungary?
vote up1vote down
No, Haifa's in Israel. :-)
I found a Slovakian Pašút by googling it, but it probably isn't very common, because I got only three results. Anyway, since it all seems to revolve more or less around Slovakia and Hungary, I suppose you can forget the idea of Old English ending... it's a completely different language.
One of the things I found, though, is some list of surname endings and according to how the other Slovakian surnames ending this way look, it's probably derived from a first name. Like Pavol, maybe.
vote up1vote down