Surnames Matching Pattern *ff

This is a list of surnames in which the pattern is *ff.
usage
pattern
Brinkerhoff German
From a German place name meaning "farm near a slope".
Duff Scottish, Irish
Anglicized form of Mac Dhuibh or Ó Duibh.
Falstaff Literature
The name of a buffoonish character, John Falstaff, appearing in four of William Shakespeare's plays. He is the central character in The Merry Wives of Windsor (1602). Shakespeare probably adapted it from the surname of John Fastolf, a 15th-century knight. The medieval surname Fastolf, no longer in use, was derived from the Norse given name Fastúlfr.
Huff English
Means "spur of a hill", from Old English hoh.
Kilduff Irish
From the Irish Mac Giolla Dhuibh meaning "son of the black-haired man".
Longstaff English
Occupational name for an official who was equipped with a ceremonial staff, or a nickname for a tall person.
MacDuff Scottish
Anglicized form of Mac Dhuibh.
Pfaff German
From a nickname meaning "priest, cleric" from Old High German pfaffo, from Latin papa.
Radcliff English
From various place names in England that mean "red cliff" in Old English.
Ruff German, English
From the given name Rolf.
Sokoloff Jewish
Means "son of Sokol".
Tuff English
Variant of Tuft.