Browse Submitted Surnames

This is a list of submitted surnames in which the gender is unisex; and the order is random.
usage
gender
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Elkano Basque
Habitational name derived from Basque elke "field, garden, cultivated land" and the toponymic suffix -ano.
Lif Swedish
This is most likely a name adopted by soldiers in the 17th century. The actual meaning is unclear. It could be taken directly from the Swedish word liv meaning "life" or from a location named with this element.
De Chinese
From the Chinese element de, meaning "ethics, moral, virtue".
Kaljujärv Estonian
Kaljujärv is an Estonian surname meaning "cliff lake".
Partenheimer German
Habitational name for someone from Partenheim in Rheinhessen.
Nantz German
From a pet form of a Germanic compound name formed with Nant- (for example, Nantwig, Nantger); its meaning is reflected in Middle High German nenden 'to dare'.
Meeru Estonian
Meeru is an Estonian surname derived from "meer" meaning "mayor".
Behrouzi Persian
From the given name Behrouz.
Chalcraft English
Surname of Anglo- Saxon origin. Topographical or locational surname... [more]
Isidro Spanish
From the given name Isidro.
Annamaa Estonian
Annamaa is an Estonian surname meaning "give land".
Heilmann German
Variant of Heil.
Jankins English (American)
Variant of Jenkins.
Zapato Spanish
Means "shoe" in Spanish.
Allam Arabic
originally an arabic name but has been used by english speakers. the name means "recognized" or "famous". in other languages it means "one who represents us" and in some languages translates as "flag"
Calinisan Tagalog
From Tagalog kalinisan meaning "cleanliness, purity".
Süssmann German, Jewish
A nickname for a sweet person.
Marušič Slovene
Slovene form of Marušić.
Teshigawara Japanese
From Japanese 勅 (te) meaning "imperial order", 使 (shi) meaning "messenger, envoy", 河 (ga) meaning "river", and 原 (wara) meaning "field".
Verma Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Punjabi, Bengali
Alternate transcription of Varma.
Divita Italian
Derives from the word vita meaning "life".
Koops Dutch, Low German
Patronymic from the given name Koop, a diminutive form of Jakob. Alternatively, a variant of German and Dutch Koop.
Pozos Spanish, Galician
A habitational name from any of several places named with the plural of pozo, meaning ‘well’. See Pozo.
Aosaka Japanese
Ao means "green, blue" and saka means "slope, hill".
Calma Filipino, Pampangan
From Pampangan kalma meaning "fate, fortune", ultimately from Sanskrit कर्मन् (karman).
Casimir French
From the given name Casimir.
Pirovano Italian
Probably from a place in Lombardy, itself possibly deriving from Ancient Greek πυρο- (pyro-) "fire" and -γενής (-genes) "born of".
Desapriya Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala දේශප්රිය (see Deshapriya).
Louisi French (Caribbean), Haitian Creole
Derived from the given name Louis.
Billinis Greek
Of Italian origin, probably a Hellenized version of Bellini.
Guramishvili Georgian
Means "son of Guram".
Chillingworth English (Rare)
Notable as the surname of Hester Prynne's husband Roger Chillingworth in the 1850 novel 'The Scarlet Letter'
Shaffer German (Americanized)
Americanized form of German Schäfer.
Laflash French (Quebec, Anglicized)
Anglicization of the name "Richer dit Laflèche." Richer comes from a Germanic personal name composed of the elements ric ‘power(ful)’ + hari, heri ‘army.' Laflèche is a reference to La Flèche, a town in historical Anjou, France... [more]
Mkrtchian Armenian
Alternate transcription of Mkrtchyan.
Abrahami Judeo-Spanish
From the given name Abraham.
Cordasco Italian
Possibly derived from a dialectical form of Italian cordesco "late-born lamb", or in Old Italian "of or pertaining to cows or sheep".
Kasai Japanese
It means fire in Japanese
Cha Korean
Cha is a relatively uncommon family name in Korea. The Yeonan Cha clan is the only clan. The founding ancestor was Cha Hyo-jeon, son of Ryoo Cha-dal (류차달) (10th century AD). Most of the clan's members live in Gyeongsang, Hwanghae, and P'yŏngan provinces... [more]
Theall English
Theall is a rare English surname. It originates from the British town of Theale.
Pater Dutch, German, English, Polish
From Latin pater "father", used as a religious title for a priest in Roman Catholicism. Possibly used semi-literally for a man who worked in the church, or figuratively for a solemn or pompous man.
Klobučar Slovene, Croatian, Serbian
Occupational name derived from Serbian, Croatian and Slovene klobučar meaning "hatter" (a derivative of klobuk meaning "hat"), originally indicating a person who made, sold or repaired hats.
Bonnevier Swedish
Likely brought to Sweden by Walloon immigrants in the 16th century.
Larrazabal Basque, Spanish
Habitational name derived from Basque larre "field, pastureland, prairie" and zabal "wide, open, ample".
Masseter English
Perhaps means "brewery worker" (from Middle English mash "fermentable mixture of hot water and grain" + rudder "rudder-shaped stirrer").
Khamdamov Uzbek, Tajik
Means "son of Khamdam".
Rader German
Variation of Rademacher, meaning "maker of wheels" in German ("rat" meaning wheel), later shortened to Rader and other variations such as Redder, Raeder, Redler, etc.
Van Aanholt Dutch
Means "from Anholt", a small village in the northeast of the province of Drenthe in the Netherlands, itself meaning "hold, rest" in Dutch (a place where people could rest for the night). A famous bearer is the Dutch soccer player Patrick van Aanholt (1990-).
Retief Afrikaans
Afrikaans form of Rétif.
Seese German
Comes from a Germanic personal name, Sigizo, from a compound name formed with sigi ‘victory’ as the first element.
Malfeyt Dutch, Flemish
Generally a Dutch form (or "dutchization", if you will) of Malfait, with the spelling reflecting the surname's origin from older times (as -eyt is an exclusively archaic spelling that has not survived into modern times like its counterparts -eit and -ijt did)... [more]
Jouttijärvi Finnish (Rare)
From the name of any of the many lakes named Jouttijärvi in Finland.
Pandjaitan Batak
Older spelling of Panjaitan based on Dutch orthography.
McGuchan Irish
Irish: mainly Scottish spelling of Irish Mac Eacháin, see McGahan.
Palomino Spanish
Diminutive of Spanish paloma "pigeon, dove" (see Palomo).
Nagib Arabic
Derived from the given name Najib.
Catching English
Likely a variant of Kitchen.
Shum Chinese (Cantonese)
Cantonese romanization of Shen.
Maksatov Kazakh, Kyrgyz
Means "son of Maksat".
Siddiqi Urdu, Bengali
From the given name Siddiq.
Ryang Korean
North Korean form of Yang.
Eleftheriades Greek (Cypriot)
Alternate transcription of Greek Ελευθεριάδης (see Eleftheriadis) chiefly used in Cyprus.
Ghassan Arabic (Modern)
The Ghassan surname originated in the village of Furzol in eastern Lebanon. It is believed that the name came from Shefa-'Amr in Israel, and was brought by Ghassans that were fleeing the unjust rule of Ahmed al-Jazzar, the Wali of Sidon and Damascus in the late 18th century... [more]
Elsharkawy Arabic (Egyptian)
Means "the easterner, the one from the east" from Arabic شَرْقِيّ (šarqiyy) meaning "east, eastern".
Criss German (Americanized)
Americanized form of German Gries or Kries.
Degitz English (American)
An Americanized form of the Dutch surname DeGitz.
Hustopeče Czech
This indicates familial origin within either of 2 eponymous Moravian towns.
Eisenberg German, Jewish
Means "iron hill" from German isen meaning "iron" and berg meaning "hill".
Sabah Arabic, Urdu, Bengali, Turkish
From the given name Sabah.
Christodoulopoulos Greek
Means "descendant of Christ's servant" in Greek.
Köcher German
It literally means "quiver".
Tampõld Estonian
Tampõld is an Estonian surname derived from "tamm" ("oak") and "põld" ("field").
Allerton English
Mayflower passengers
Volga Russian
From the river Volga (Волга).
Noh Korean
Alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 노 (see No).
Ridala Estonian
Ridala is an Estonia surname meaning "set, line, or range" "area".
Wiggins English
Patronymic form of Wiggin.
Kulasingha Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala කුලසිංහ (see Kulasinghe).
Končar Slovene, Serbian, Croatian
Derived from konac meaning ''thread'', ''string''.
Faisao Micronesian, Carolinian
Meaning unavailable.
Markovnikov Russian (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Markov.
Məsimov Azerbaijani
Means "son of Məsim".
Gamberini Italian
Possibly from the given name Gambrinus or Gambarus. The Italian word gambero "prawn, shrimp" has also been suggested as an origin.
Szarabajka Polish, English
His surname, Szarabajka, means "Grey Tale" in Polish. Last name is pronounced "sarah-bike-ah".
Batey English (?)
Originates from mostly northern England. Is the presumed given name to fishers. (With it meaning "Small fishing boat" in old English.)
Hamajima Japanese
From Japanese 浜 (hama) meaning "beach, seashore" and 島 (shima) meaning "island".
Krasyuk Ukrainian
From Ukrainian краси (krasy), meaning "beauty".
Matteo Italian
From the given name Matteo.
Ehsan Urdu, Bengali
Derived from the given name Ihsan.
Stanwood English (American)
From Old English stan meaning "stone, rock" and weald meaning "forest, wooded area".
Kitashima Japanese
Kita means "north" and shima means "island".
Aissi Arabic (Maghrebi)
Derived from the given name Isa 1.
Swigert German (Americanized)
Americanized form of German Schweigert or Zweigert, an occupational name for a gardener or tender of plants, from an agent derivative of Middle High German zwigen, meaning "to graft" or "to plant".
Gargan Irish
shortened Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Geargáin "descendant of Geargán" or shortened from Mac Geargáin "son of Geargán" a personal name from a diminutive of garg "fierce".
Kagewari Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 蔭 (kage) meaning "shade" and 割 (wari), from 割り (wari), the continuative form of 割る (waru) meaning "to divide; to separate, to crack", referring to a shady land with cracks.
Jumawan Filipino, Cebuano
Derived from Cebuano hawan meaning "bare, clear".
Gittings Welsh
Possibly a patronymic from a byname from Welsh cethin "dusky", "swarthy".
Bakeš Czech
From a derivative of the personal name Bak.
Brazos Filipino, English (American)
Means "arms" in Spanish.
Lammas English
Lammas is a surname from the village Lamarsh in Essex, England.
Berglin Swedish
Combination of Swedish berg "mountain" and the surname suffix -in.
Bangon Filipino, Maranao
Means "to rise, to get up" or "plot of land" in Maranao.
Talarico Italian
From a variant of the given name Atalarico, an Italian form of Germanic Athalaric "noble power".
Tumgoev Ingush (Russified)
Russified form of an Ingush surname, which is from the name of an Ingush teip (clan). The clan's name itself is derived from Tumag (ТIумагI), the name of a village in Ingushetia, possibly meaning "to see with the heart" in Ingush.
Chodecki Polish
This indicates familial origin within the Kuyavian town of Chodecz.
Dhungana Nepali
From the name of a village in Nepal called Dhungani.
Leggio Italian
From Sicilian leggiu "light, not heavy; superficial", a nickname for someone considered unreliable or irresponsible. Variant of Leggièri.
Tsukamoto Japanese
From Japanese 塚 (tsuka) meaning "mound, hillock" or 柄 (tsuka) meaning "design, pattern" or "handle, hilt" and 本 (moto) meaning "base, root, origin".
Brouwers Dutch
Patronymic of Brouwer.
Kanba Japanese
From 樺 (kanba) meaning "birch".
Kasetalu Estonian
Kasetalu is an Estonian surname meaning "birch farmstead".
Salu Estonian
Salu is an Estonian surname meaning "grove".
Soliday American
Reportedly German and Dutch background? Never have really known. The history that has been told my siblings and I is that three brothers came from Germany to the US in late 1800 and went into business in Phila - they eventually argued and split up and two of them changed the spelling of their last name and scattered throughout PA - When I left home in 1963 - mY Father James Edward Soliday, son of John Soliday and Martha Freidline Soliday and us children were the only ones in our area... [more]
Shaladi Arabic (Maghrebi)
Of unknown meaning (chiefly Libyan).
Tanko Romanian (Americanized)
In Romania Tankó is most common in Harghita, Covasna, and Bacău counties. Tankó is also common in Hungary and Slovakia.
Cormier French
French topographic name for someone who lived near a sorb or service tree, Old French cormier (from corme, the name of the fruit for which the tree was cultivated, apparently of Gaulish origin).
Beas English
Variant of Bees.
Penning Upper German
Shortened form of Panno, which is a personal given name.
Getty Irish
Meaning: Hill, valley.... [more]
Calumpang Filipino, Tagalog
From Tagalog kalumpang meaning "wild almond tree".
Bolat Kazakh
From the given name Bolat.
Ootono Japanese (Rare)
Oo means "big, great, large, huge" and tono is an outdated honorific that literally means "lord".
Brenari Jewish, Italian
Etymology uncertain, possibly a habitational name.
Pantazzi Romanian
Best known as the surname of a certain Sybille.
Larrain Basque
Means "threshing floor" in Basque. This is also the name of a hamlet in Navarre, Spain.
Sweijs Dutch (Rare)
Etymology uncertain. Possibly derived from German Schweiz "Switzerland".
Trettin German
Habitational name from a place so named in Brandenburg.
Vaandrager Dutch
Means "flag-bearer, ensign" in Dutch, from vaan "banner, vane, flag" and drager "carrier, bearer".
Kobata Japanese (Rare)
Variant of Hatta, added Japanese 小 (ko) meaning "small, little".
Klier German, Czech, Jewish
artificial name (for Jews) and nickname (for Germans and Czechs) derived from German dialect klier "castrated cock".
Axels English
Derived from the given name Axel.
Siqueira Portuguese
Habitational name from numerous places called Siqueira or Sequeira in Portugal or Galicia, derived from sequeira meaning "arid land" (ultimately from Latin siccus "dry").
Zavarzina Russian
Feminine form of Zavarzin.
Cruzan Dutch (Americanized)
Americanized spelling of Cruyssen.
Waverly English
Meaning, "from Waverley (Surrey)" or "from the brushwood meadow." From either waever meaning "brushwood" or waefre meaning "flickering, unstable, restless, wandering" combined with leah meaning "meadow, clearing."
Vitorino Portuguese
From the given name Vitorino
Van Barneveld Dutch
Means "from Barneveld", a town in the Dutch province of Gelderland.
Prvulović Vlach
Means "son of Prvul".
Peinado Spanish
Derived from peinado meaning "combed" (past participle of peinar meaning "to comb"), hence a nickname for a well-groomed person or for someone with naturally smooth rather than curly hair.
Krátký Czech
Means "short".
Pilipchuk Ukrainian (Russified), Ukrainian (Belarusianized)
Russified and Belarusianised form of Pylypchuk. Pilipchuk was the maiden name of the Belarusian oppositionist Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.
Arguijo Spanish
Spanish: Habitational Name From A Place Called Arguijo In Zamora Province.
Al-attar Arabic
Means "the perfumer, the druggist" from Arabic عَطَّار (ʿaṭṭār) "perfumer, druggist, pharmacist".
Daudzai Pashto
Means "son of Daud" in Pashto.
Yumekawa Japanese
Yumekawa means yume (夢) means "dream" and kawa (川) means "river", so this means "dream river".
Vardanian Armenian
Alternate transcription of Vardanyan.
Kurano Japanese
Kura means "storehouse, warehouse" no means "field, wilderness, plain".
Ticozzi Italian
Possibly derived from the given name Ardito or its diminutive forms Ardizzo or Ardizzone.
Hindang Filipino, Cebuano
From the name of a small tree in the genus Myrica.
Krebsbach German
From a place name meaning "crab stream" in German.
Tamang Tamang
From Tamang རྟ་དམག་ (Ta Damag) meaning "Tamang", a Tibeto-Burman ethnic group.
Ágoston Hungarian
From the given name Ágoston.
Grogan Irish
Derived from the native Gaelic O'Gruagain Sept that was initially located in County Roscommon but which became widely dispersed. The name is derived from a Gaelic word meaning 'fierceness'.
Southwell English
English surname meaning "From the south well"
Kravar Croatian
Means ''cow herder''.
Elsegood English (British), English (Australian)
Derived from an Old English given name, possibly *Ælfgod or *Æðelgod, in which the second element is god "god". (Another source gives the meaning "temple-god", presumably from ealh and god.)... [more]
Trubetskoy Russian
Meaning ‘From Trubetsk’.
Tsukimoto Japanese
月 (Tsuki) means "moon, month" and 本 (moto) meets "origin, root, source".
Lozac’h Breton
From a Breton word meaning “husband” or “patriarch”
Nakaura Japanese
Naka means "Middle" and Ura means "Gulf, Bay, Inlet, Beach, Seacoast, Creek."
Dukeshire English
Probably a combination of Duke and Shire.
Seneviratne Sinhalese
From Sinhala සෙනෙවි (senevi) meaning "commander, general" combined with Sanskrit रत्न (ratna) meaning "jewel, treasure".
Benício Portuguese (Brazilian)
Spanish form of Benedict, from the Late Latin name Benedictus, which meant "blessed". A notable bearer is Puerto Rican actor Benicio del Toro (born 1967).
Kiff German
Topographic name from a Westphalian dialect Kiff "outhouse, tied cottage, shack".
Yel Turkish
Means "wind, breeze" in Turkish.
Karađić Serbian
Variant of Karadžić, and often its misspelling.
Dražeta Serbian
Derived from the name Dražen.
Nongrum Khasi, Indian
"Nongrum" is the name given for the "Title/Surname" of a persons. It is famous only in Khasi Hills, Meghalaya,shillong, the land of the "Khasis".
Sang Estonian
Sang is an Estonian surname meaning "handle" or "bail".