AibaJapanese From Japanese 相 (ai) meaning "mutual" or 饗 (ai) meaning "banquet", combined with 馬 (ba) meaning "horse", 場 (ba) meaning "location", 羽 (ba) meaning "feathers", 庭 (ba) meaning "courtyard" or 葉 (ba) meaning "leaf".
AkibaJapanese From the Japanese 秋 (aki) "autumn" and 葉 (ha or ba) "leaf."
AlmbladSwedish Combination of Swedish alm "elm" and blad "leaf".
AlmlöfSwedish Combination of Swedish alm "elm" and löv "leaf".
AobaJapanese 青 (Ao) means "green, blue" and 葉 (ba) being a form of, ha meaning "leaf". This surname refers to a fresh leaf. ... [more]
BarbosaPortuguese denoting a person who lived by land that contained overgrown leafy vegetation from the portuguese word barba "leaf" + oso/osa (adjective suffix); variant of Barboza
BlattGerman, Jewish Ornamental name derived from German blatt and Yiddish blat meaning "leaf", or a topographic name for someone who lived at a farm on a ledge on a mountainside, derived from Middle High German blate meaning "flat surface, ledge, plateau".
CrisafulliItalian Derived from a Greek name, perhaps from χρυσός (khrysos) "gold" and φύλλον (phyllon) "leaf, foliage".
EichenlaubGerman, Jewish Derived from Eichenlau, a topographic name from Middle High German eichen "oaks" and loh "forest clearing", reinterpreted through folk etymology as Eichenlaub, meaning "oak leaf".
EkbladSwedish Combination of Swedish ek "oak" and blad "leaf".
EklöfSwedish Combination of Swedish ek "oak" and löf, an archaic spelling of löv, "leaf".
FeuilleFrench This is actually a standard word in French, correctly pronounce like "furry" without the r's. It means "leaf", or "sheet" (i.e. feuille de papier).
LöfquistSwedish Combination of Swedish löv "leaf" and kvist "twig".
LöfströmSwedish Combination of Swedish löv "leaf" and ström "stream".
LöfvénSwedish (Rare) Combination of Swedish löv "leaf" and the common surname suffix -én, a derivative of Latin -enius "descendant of". Stefan Löfven (b. 1957) is a Swedish politician and the prime minister of Sweden since 2014.
LøvaasNorwegian Ultimately derived from Old Norse lauf "leaf, foliage" and áss "hill, ridge". Taken from any of the many farms in Norway named Løvaas,
LøvdahlNorwegian (Rare) From the name of any of the numerous homes or places named Old Norse lauf "leaf foliage" and dalr "valley".
LovelandEnglish From a surname which was derived from a place name, possibly meaning "Lufa's land" in Old English or "leaf land" in Norwegian.
MagomboSwahili, African, Swazi (Rare) Meaning unknown, possibly related from the fore name of the same name. It means "leaves" (verb) in Swahili.
ReytblatYiddish Means "red leaf" in Yiddish. This is somewhat rare, chiefly used by Jews from Russia and Ukraine.
RoosilehtEstonian Roosileht is an Estonian surname meaning "rose leaf".
RootsEstonian Roots is an Estonian surname meaning "leaf stalk" or "stem". May also derive from "rootslane", meaning "Swede".
RootsmaaEstonian Rootsmaa is an Estonian surname meaning "leaf stalk/stem land".
RootsmäeEstonian Rootsmäe is an Estonian surname meaning "leaf stalk/stem hill/mountain".
TampubolonBatak From Batak tampuk meaning "leaf stalk, base" and bolon meaning "big, large, great".
TörnbladSwedish Combination of Swedish törne "thorn" and blad "leaf".