Browse Submitted Surnames

This is a list of submitted surnames in which an editor of the name is Frollein Gladys.
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Schram German, English, Yiddish
Derived from German Schramme (Middle High German schram(me)) and Yiddish shram, all of which mean "scar".
Schucan Romansh
Derived from the given name Joachim.
Schwieder German
Derived from the given name Swider.
Schwier German
Contracted form of Schwieder.
Schwiers German
Patronymic form of Schwier.
Sea English
Variant of See.
Sealy English
Derived from Old English sælig "blessed, fortunate, prosperous, happy" and was used as a term to describe someone with a cheerful, happy disposition.
Seay Scottish, Irish
Of uncertain origin and meaning.
Sedaine French
Derived from the given name Sidoine.
Seeley English
Variant of Sealy.
Seeli Romansh
Derived from a diminutive of the given name Basilius.
Seiler German
German and Jewish occupational surname for a rope maker.
Sewell English
English from the Middle English personal names Siwal(d) and Sewal(d), Old English Sigeweald and Seweald, composed of the elements sige ‘victory’ and se ‘sea’ + weald ‘rule’... [more]
Shandy English (Rare)
Shandy appears as a rare surname, mostly found in English-speaking countries going back to the 1600s. This name may originate from the English dialect adjective meaning "boisterous" or "empty headed; half crazy", of which the earliest record dates to 1691, though any further explanation for its origins are unknown... [more]
Shenberger English (?)
The name Shenberger comes from a common mix up with the archaic Austrian-German surname Schoenberg; meaning "Beautiful Mountain."
Shy English (American)
Americanization of Schei.
Sialm Romansh
Derived from a short form of the given name Anselm.
Sider English (American)
Americanization of Seider.
Sievi Romansh
Derived from the given name Sievi.
Siewert German
Derived from the Frisian and Low German given name Sievert.
Sigel Jewish
Variant of Siegel 3.
Siler English
Anglicized form of Seiler, an occupational name for a rope maker, from German Seil ‘rope’
Sinnamon English
Scottish surname which is a corruption of the place name Kinnimonth, meaning "head of the hill".
Sivelle French
A rare surname.
Sobranie Macedonian (Rare)
Sobranie means "Parliament" in Macedonian.
Soete Low German
Derived from Low German söt /seut "sweet".
Solak Polish
Surname; meaning seller of salt or salt
Sonder Romansh
Derived from the given name Alexander.
Soyer French
French surname (Alexis Benoist Soyer is a famous bearer).
Speck German
Variant of Specker as well as a locational surname from one of various places called Speck, Specke and Specken in northern Germany and Spöck in southern Germany, as well as an occupational surname derived from German Speck "bacon" denoting a butcher who sepcialized in the production of bacon, as well as a derisive nickname for a corpulent person.
Sperry English
Variant of Spear.
Stancel German
Probably an altered spelling of Stancil or possibly of German Stenzel.
Stauffer German
This surname refers either to various towns named Stauffen or else it might be derived from Middle High German stouf "high rock/cliff/crag".
Steel English
Variant of Steele.
Stoian Romanian
Derived from Bulgarian Stoyan.
Stolte German
Derived from Middle Low German stolt "proud; stately; magnificent".
Straughan English
Northern English (Northumbria and the Northeast) variant of Scottish Strachan.
Stukeley English
From a surname meaning "woodland clearing with tree stumps" in Old English.
Stuyvesant Dutch
Dutch surname of unknown meaning. ... [more]
Styczeń Polish
Derived from Polish styczeń "January (month)".
Sukacz Polish (Rare)
father surname.
Suliman Arabic
From the given name Sulayman.
Summit English (Canadian)
Of uncertain origin and meaning.
Sykes English
English Surname (mainly Yorkshire): topographic name for someone who lived by a stream in a marsh or in a hollow, from Middle English syke ‘marshy stream’, ‘damp gully’, or a habitational name from one of the places named with this word, in Lancashire and West Yorkshire.
Symond English
Variant of Simon.
Tabor English, Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, Jewish
English: metonymic occupational name for a drummer, from Middle English, Old French tabo(u)r ‘drum’.... [more]
Talley English
Variant of Tolley.
Tambor Jewish
Derived from German Tambour "drummer in a regiment", ultimately via French tambour from Old French tambor "drum".
Tannhäuser German
Habitational name for someone from any of the places called Tannhausen in Brandenburg, Silesia or Württemberg.
Tanno Romansh
Of debated origin and meaning; theories include a derivation from the given name Donatus.
Tarnutzer Romansh
Derived from the place name Malanser Tarnutz.
Tatlow English (British, Rare)
I heard it was from a small village in England called Tallow.
Templeton English
Derived from Templeton, from the English words 'temple' and 'town'.