[Surname] Meaning of Sushkov
Does anyone know what Sushkov mean?
I guess it's russian by the suffix -ov, but I don't know what the root Sushko mean - www.ancestry.com just says that Susko or Sushko is slavic, but there's no info about its meaning.
I guess it's russian by the suffix -ov, but I don't know what the root Sushko mean - www.ancestry.com just says that Susko or Sushko is slavic, but there's no info about its meaning.
Replies
It could certainly be derived from one of the many places that start with Sushk- in Russia and Ukraine. Now all you have to do is find out what the toponyms mean :-)
Anybody know any Russian? the name is explained here -
http://mirimen.com/co_fam/Sushkov-30F4.html
From what I can make out the basis of the name is SUKHOI, meaning "dry, arid", which looks like it could be a locative description. But there is also a reference to a meaning "thin, gaunt", so perhaps describing a person.
http://mirimen.com/co_fam/Sushkov-30F4.html
From what I can make out the basis of the name is SUKHOI, meaning "dry, arid", which looks like it could be a locative description. But there is also a reference to a meaning "thin, gaunt", so perhaps describing a person.
Thanks for the explanation!
Do you think it is possible that Sushko or Sushka was also a personal name in Russia (besides in many other slavic countries) and it was maybe used as short for the name Francis?
I got this idea by searching on the internet - for example I found out that Suske is short for Francis in flemish - and then it seems that last names containing the root Sushk- are widespread in many slavic countries (for example Suska, Suskic, Suskovic, Suszka, Suszko, etc) - the name Francis has been widespread in Europe throughout the centuries.
Do you think it is possible that Sushko or Sushka was also a personal name in Russia (besides in many other slavic countries) and it was maybe used as short for the name Francis?
I got this idea by searching on the internet - for example I found out that Suske is short for Francis in flemish - and then it seems that last names containing the root Sushk- are widespread in many slavic countries (for example Suska, Suskic, Suskovic, Suszka, Suszko, etc) - the name Francis has been widespread in Europe throughout the centuries.
If it is from a diminutive of a given name I don't think it will be Francis. St. Francis (of Assisi) is a saint of the western church. I don't think the name had any currency in the orthodox churches of Eastern Europe and the Balkans.