Browse Submitted Surnames

This is a list of submitted surnames in which the gender is unisex; and the length is 8.
usage
gender
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aubuchon French (Modern, ?)
The Aubuchon name is French, but of uncertain origin. It is probably from the patronymic prefix au + buchon, a dialect term for a woodcutter (Standard French bûcheron).
Auerbach German, Jewish
Topographical name for someone who lived by a stream (Middle High German bach) that was near a swamp or marsh (auer).
Augustus English
Means "great" or "venerable", derived from Latin augere "to increase".
Augustyn Polish
From the given name Augustyn.
Aukerman Dutch (Americanized)
Americanized form of Dutch Ackerman.
Aurakzai Pashto
Alternate transcription of Orakzai.
Ausborne English
Possibly a variant spelling of Osborne.
Avakumov Russian
variant of Abakumov
Avallone Italian
Topographic name for someone who lived in a deep valley.
Avanceña Filipino
Hispanicised form of Arabic اِبْن سِينَا‎ (ibn sīnā) meaning "son of Sina". This was the Arabic name for Avicenna (980-1037), a Persian polymath.
Avdalyan Armenian
Derived from the given name Avdal.
Avdeyeva Russian
feminine form of Avdeyev
Avdokhin Russian
variant of Avdonin
Avdonina Russian
feminine form of Avdonin
Avdoshin Russian
variant of Avdonin
Avdyunin Russian
variant of Avdonin
Aversano Italian
A nickname for a wealthy person.
Avguštin Slovene
Derived from the given name Avguštin.
Avgustov Russian
Means "son of Avgust".
Avigdori Jewish (Rare)
Surname variation of Avigdor, used to distinguish from said first name Avigdor.
Avogadro Italian
An occupational name for a lawyer or public official with administrative duties. Ultimately from Latin advocator, "advocate".
Avrahami Hebrew (Americanized)
Americanized version of Abrahami.
Aydınlar Turkish
Derived from the Turkish word “aydın” meaning “enlightened”.
Aytmatov Kyrgyz
Means "son of Aytmat".
Ayyagari Indian
Owner, Teacher
Azadpour Persian
Means "son of Azad".
Azamatov Uzbek
Means "son of Azamat".
Azaranka Belarusian
Belarusian form of Azarenko.
Azarenka Belarusian
Alternate transcription of Belarusian Азаранка (see Azaranka).
Azarenko Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Azarov.
Azizpoor Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian عزیزپور (see Azizpour).
Azizpour Persian
Means "son of Aziz" in Persian.
Azubuike Igbo
From the given name Azubuike.
Baamonde Galician
This indicates familial origin within either of 5 eponymous parishes.
Baamonde Spanish
habitational name from one of the Galician places called Baamonde (earlier written Bahamonde) in the province of Lugo most probably Santiago de Baamonde (Begonte).
Baatirov Kyrgyz
Means "son of Baatir" in Kyrgyz.
Babaylan Visayan
From "babaylan" which were pre-Hispanic priestesses or mediums. The root word of which is "babaye" which is Cebuano for woman.
Babynets Ukrainian
From Ukrainian бабин (babyn), meaning "woman".
Bachechi Italian
Comes from the Tuscan-Italian personal name Baccio.
Bachleda um Polish, Slovak
From Romanian băchlit meaning "grumpy". In Poland, this surname is typically borne by Gorals, often as part of double surnames like Bachleda-Curuś or Bachleda-Księdzularz.
Backhaus German
from Middle High German backhūs "bakehouse" a word composed of Middle High German bah "something baked" and hus "house"... [more]
Bäcklund Swedish
Combination of Swedish bäck "brook, stream" and Lund "grove".
Backlund Swedish
Combination of Swedish backe "hill, slope" and Lund "grove".
Bacquier Medieval Basque
Meaning cowboy or rancher.
Bacunawa Filipino, Cebuano
Derived from Cebuano bakunawa referring to a type of serpent or dragon in Visayan mythology.
Baddeley English
From place names in both Suffolk and Staffordshire derived from an Old English personal name, 'Badda,' possibly meaning "battle" and lee or leah for a "woodland clearing," therefore meaning someone from "Badda's woodland clearing."
Badowski Polish
Habitational name for someone from a place called Badowo in Skierniewice voivodeship.
Badzakov Bulgarian, Macedonian
Patronymic name derived from the Turkish word "bacak" which means "leg".
Bagdonas Lithuanian
Patronymic from the personal name Bagdon, Lithuanian form of Polish Bogdan.
Baggerly English
English: variant of Bagley .
Baghdadi Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic البغدادي (see al-Baghdadi).
Bagiński Polish
From the word baginiak meaning "master".
Baguinda Filipino, Maguindanao, Maranao
From the Minangkabau title bagindo denoting a prince or member of royalty. It was probably adopted in honour of Rajah Baguinda Ali (Raja Bagindo Ali in Indonesian sources), a Minangkabau prince who became a ruler of the Sulu Archipelago.
Bahadori Persian
From the given name Bahador.
Bahdanaŭ Belarusian
Means "son of Bahdan".
Bahromov Uzbek, Tajik
Means "son of Bahrom".
Baigorri Basque
From the name of a commune in Bayonne, France, derived from Basque ibai "river" and gorri "red" or "bare, naked".
Bajramaj Albanian
Means "descendant of Bajram" in Albanian.
Bakedano Basque
It indicates familial origin within the eponymous neighborhood of the Navarrese municipality of Ameskoabarrena.
Bakhtiar Persian, Urdu
From the given name Bakhtiar.
Bakulina Russian
feminine form of Bakulin
Bakunina Russian
feminine form of Bakunin
Balagtas Filipino, Tagalog
Means "shortcut, direct (path or statement)" in Tagalog.
Balaguer Catalan, Spanish, Filipino
Habitational name for someone originally from the city of Balaguer in Catalonia, Spain.
Balajcza Polish, Hungarian
May be related to the Hungarian place name Balaj or it may be a derivation of a personal name. The -cza suffix can suggest "of" or "from", indicating origin or descent.
Balandin Russian
From a nickname derived from Russian баланда (balanda) meaning "idle talk, nonsense".
Balansag Filipino, Cebuano
From Cebuano bansag meaning "name".
Balaskas Greek
Masculine form of Balaska.
Bălcescu Romanian
Derived from the name of a Romanian town Bălcești.
Baldomir Galician
Derived from the given name Baldo.
Baldrick Medieval English
The name of Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson)'s much-hated slave in the comedy Blackadder.... [more]
Baleckas Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Valeska
Balfager Gothic, Medieval Portuguese
Name of a Visigoth noble family (around the 10th century) from the Iberian Peninsula (current northern Portugal), meaning "bold spear"; they descent from the Balti dynasty.
Balingit Filipino, Tagalog
From the name of Rajah Balingit (or Pedro Balingit), a 16th-century Filipino chief.
Balitaan Filipino, Tagalog
Means "to share news" in Tagalog.
Balkarov Karachay-Balkar
Means "son of a Balkar."
Balkwill English
Possibly derived from the name of a lost settlement in Devon, composed of Old English balca "balk, beam; ridge, bank" and wella "spring, stream". Alternatively, can be a variant form of Bakewell.
Balogbog Filipino, Cebuano
From Cebuano balugbog meaning "marble".
Baltakis Lithuanian
Means “white-eyed” in Lithuanian, from balta meaning “white” and akis meaning “eye”.
Baltasar Spanish
From the given name Baltasar.
Baltazar Spanish, Portuguese
From the given name Baltazar.
Bandeira Portuguese
Portuguese cognate of Bandera.
Bandiera Italian
from bandiera "banner flag" hence presumably a status name for a standard bearer. Italian cognate of Banner.
Banerjea Bengali
Different spelling of Banerjee.
Bangoura Manding
Guinean Susu surname of unknown Meaning.
Bankhead Scottish, Northern Irish
Topographic name for someone who lived at the top or end of a bank or hill, derived from Middle English bank meaning "bank" and hed meaning "head". There are several minor places in Scotland so called, but the most likely source of the surname is one on the border between the parishes of Kilmarnock and Dreghorn in Ayrshire, Scotland.
Bankston English
Derived from the old English world "Banke" usually given to a family who lived near a hill or a slope.
Bantayan Filipino, Cebuano
Means "watchtower, guard-place" in Cebuano.
Banuelos Spanish
Spanish (Bañuelos): habitational name from any of various places, primarily Bañuelos de Bureba in Burgos, named for their public baths, from a diminutive of baños ‘baths’ (see Banos)
Banville French, English, Irish
From a place in france derived from the Germanic name Bada and French ville "village, town".
Baquiran Filipino, Ilocano
Derived from Ilocano bakiran meaning "forest".
Barakzai Pashto
Means "son of Barak 2" in Pashto.
Barakzay Pashto
Alternate transcription of Pashto بارکزی (see Barakzai).
Barandun Romansh
Of debated origin and meaning; theories include a derivation from Italian baraonda "chaos; uproar".
Barbeito Galician
Means "fallow, farmland" in Galician, likely a habitational name from any of various places called Barbeito.
Barbella Italian
Derived from Italian barba meaning "beard".
Bárcenas Spanish, Spanish (Mexican)
This indicates familial origin within the eponymous neighborhood of the Castilian municipality of Espinosa de los Monteros.
Barchard English
The name is derived from when the family resided in Cheshire, where they held a family seat near Birkenhead at the estuary of the River Birket. It is from the name of the river that their name is derived.
Barcroft English
English habitational name from for example Barcroft in Haworth, West Yorkshire, so named with Old English bere (barley) and croft (smallholding).
Bardwell English
From the name of a town in Suffolk, derived from the Old English byname Bearda (derived from beard "beard") or brerd "rim, edge, bank" and wille "well, spring, stream".
Barefoot English
From a nickname for someone who has a habit of going around with no footwear, or for someone looking for penance, derived from Middle English barefote.
Barendse Dutch
Means "son of Barend" in Dutch.
Barfield English
Dweller at the boar-field.
Bargetze Alemannic
Derived from the given name Pancratius, found in Liechtenstein.
Barnette English, French (?)
Variant of Bernet and perhaps also a variant of English Barnett, under French influence.
Barreira Portuguese, Galician
From several habitations in Galicia and Portugal, from barreira meaning "clay or loam hollow".
Barreiro Galician, Portuguese
Barreiro is a habitational name from any of numerous places in Galicia (Spain) and Portugal named with a derivative of barro 'clay loam'.
Barriera Italian
Means "barrier" in Italian.
Barriere French
Occupational name for a gatekeeper, from Old French barier.
Barroeta Basque
Habitational name derived from Basque berro "bramble, thicket, bush" and the toponymic suffix -eta "place of, abundance of".
Bar Shaul Hebrew
Combination of bar and Shaul, with the meaning of "son of Saul".
Barvinok Ukrainian
Means "periwinkle" in Ukrainian.
Bar Yonah Hebrew
Means "son of Jonah" or "son of the dove" from Hebrew yonah "dove".
Bar Yosef Hebrew
Combination of Bar and Yosef, with the meaning of "son of Joseph".
Barzagli Italian
Probably from barezzo, an old word of Germanic origin used to denote people who bred pigs or sold ham.
Barzegar Persian
Means "farmer" in Persian.
Barzelai Hebrew
Variant form of Barzilai.
Barzelay Hebrew
Variant form of Barzilai via Barzelai. A known bearer of this surname is American-Israeli musician Eef Barzelay (b... [more]
Barzilai Jewish
From the given name Barzillai.
Barzilay Hebrew
Variant form of Barzilai.
Bar Zohar Hebrew
Combination of the surnames Bar and Zohar.
Basciani Italian
The surname Basciani derives from a nickname probably given to the family of origin (from the Latin "Bassus"), for the probable short stature of some components, although the derivation from the Campania family "Bassus" is not excluded.
Bascöurt French
The Bascourt or Bascur surname is from France, from that place dates the beginning of the surname, however the French of previous centuries had no records of that surname. ... [more]
Baseggio Italian
Venetian variant of the given name Basilio.
Baselgia Romansh
Derived from Romansh baselgia "church".
Bashimow Turkmen
son of Bashim.
Basiński Polish
Habitational name for someone from a place called Basin.
Baskakov Russian
Of Turkic origin, specifically derived from the word "Baskak," which means "tax collector".
Bassford English
Habitational name from any of several places called Basford, especially the one in Nottinghamshire. There are others in Staffordshire and Cheshire. Either that or it's from Old English berc "birch tree" + Old English ford "ford".
Bastiaan Dutch
From the given name Bastiaan.
Bastiani Italian
From the given name Bastiano.
Bastidas Spanish
Possibly related to the French word "bastide", referring to fortified towns built in Southern France in the Middle Ages.... [more]
Baszucki Polish
Variant of Baszowski. One notable person with this surname is David Baszucki (1963-), CO founder and current CEO of the videogame platform "Roblox".
Bataille French
nickname for a bellicose man from bataille "battle" (from Latin battalia) or a habitational name from (La) Bataille the name of several places in France all named as the site of a battle in former times... [more]
Batarseh Arabic
From a plural form of the given name Butrus.
Bathgate Scottish, English
From the town of Bathgate, west of Edinburgh, Scotland. The town's name derives from Cumbric *beith, meaning 'boar' (Welsh baedd) and *gaith. meaning 'wood' (Welsh coed).
Batlokwa Tswana, Southern African
a branch of the Bakgatla section of the Bantu speaking communities which originated from the Great Lakes and Northern Central Africa. Batlokwa are said to have been a breakaway branch of the Bakgatla which is another Bahurutse section of the Tswana people.
Battello Italian
Though it coincides with Italian battello "boat, dinghy", it probably derives from the given name Bathyllus, a latinized form of a Greek name... [more]
Battiste French
Variant of Baptiste, originated from the occupation as a baptist.
Batubara Batak
Means "coal" in Batak.
Baudouin French
From the given name Baudouin.
Bäumchen German
Surname of German origin meaning "little tree". It could have been used to describe someone who lived near a tree or forest.
Baumfree Dutch, American, African American
This name is clearly derived from Sojourner Truth, a former African-American slave who was born as Isabella Bomefree (but at some point the surname was changed to the more German-looking Baumfree). Although Sojourner's original owners - James and Elizabeth Bomefree/Baumfree - were apparently of Dutch descent, it is questionable whether the surname is really of Dutch origin... [more]
Baygents English (American)
Possibly derived from Old French bezant, a kind of silver or gold coin minted in Byzantium, ultimately derived from Latin byzantius "of Byzantium"... [more]
Bayındır Turkish
Means "prosperous, rich, developed" in Turkish.
Baykalov Russian
Derived from the name of Lake Baikal, derived from Turkish baiköl meaning "rich lake".
Bayramlı Azerbaijani
From the given name Bayram and the Turkic adjective suffix -li.
Bazargan Persian
Means "merchant, trader" in Persian.
Bazinyan Armenian
Derived from Armenian bazin meaning "falcon".
Bazylyuk Ukrainian
From Ukrainian базилік (bazylik), meaning "basil".
Beaubien French (Quebec), English
From French beau meaning "beautiful" and bien meaning "well, good". The name referred to someone with physical beauty.
Beauford English
Variation of Buford. It is derived from the French word "beau", meaning "beautiful", and "ford", an Old English word meaning "river crossing".
Beausire French
French cognate of Bowser.
Beauvais French
From French place names derived from "beautiful sight".
Beauvoir English
From the surname of Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986), a French feminist and philosopher.
Beccaria Italian
From beccaro "butcher", ultimately from becco "goat".
Bechmann German (Rare)
Surname denoting someone who worked with pitch, from Middle High German bech / pech "pitch" and man, a suffix which can mean "man" or simply be used as a name suffix.
Beckford English
Means "Becca’s ford" in Old English.
Beckwith English (African)
Habitational name from a place in West Yorkshire named Beckwith, from Old English bece "beech" + Old Norse viðr "wood" (replacing the cognate Old English wudu).
Bedigian Armenian
Variant of Bedikian. Used by Armenians living outside of Armenia.
Bedikian Armenian
Based on the diminutive form Bedik of the Western Armenian name Bedros.
Bednárik mu Slovak, Hungarian (?)
Masculine in Slovak and unisex in Hungarian.
Bednarik Slovak (Expatriate), Hungarian (Expatriate, ?)
Simplified form of Bednárik, used in countries where á is not used.
Bedworth English
An English habitational surname from a place so named near Nuneaton, in Warwickshire, derived most likely from the Old English personal name Baeda (see Bede), suffixed with worþ, 'enclosure', denoting an enclosed area of land belonging to Baeda.
Beenders Dutch
Possibly an occupational name for a bookbinder or barrel maker, from Middle Dutch binden "to bind, to tie". Alternatively, could be related to been "bone".
Behbudlu Azerbaijani
From the given name Behbud and the Turkic adjective suffix -li.
Beheshti Persian
From Persian بهشت (behesht) meaning "paradise, heaven".
Behrangi Persian
From the given name Behrang.
Behrendt German
Dutch and North German surname which is a variant of Behrend.
Behroozi Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian بهروزی (see Behrouzi).
Behrouzi Persian
From the given name Behrouz.
Belabbas Arabic (Maghrebi)
From Arabic بن عباس (bin Abbas) meaning "son of Abbas".
Belchior Portuguese
From the given name Belchior.
Belfiore Italian
Means "beautiful (as a) flower", derived from Italian bel "beautiful" combined with Italian fiore "flower". Two Italian sources claim that this surname was derived from the medieval masculine given name Belfiore (which has of course the same meaning), but I can find no evidence that this was an actual given name in medieval Italy... [more]
Belgasem Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant transcription of Belkacem (chiefly Libyan).
Belgique French (Belgian)
Denotes someone from Belgium.
Belgrave English
Aristocratic surname from French, meaning "beautiful grove"; comes from a place name in Leicestershire. A famous namesake is British polar explorer Belgrave Ninnis, who perished in Antarctica on a 1912 expedition.
Belimace Romanian
From the Aromanian language.
Béliveau French (Rare), French (Quebec)
Derived from Old French besliver meaning "to stagger along", originally a nickname referring to a drunkard. It could also denote a person who lived in a beautiful, lovely valley, derived from French beau "beautiful" or Old French beu, bel "fair, lovely", combined with val meaning "valley"... [more]
Belkalem Arabic (Maghrebi)
This is the surname of Essaïd Belkalem (1989-), an Algerian footballer.