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.
Matsuike Japanese
From 松 (matsu) meaning "pine" and 生 (ike) meaning "living, life".
Enderlin German
meaning "the line of ender"
Schnitz German
From Upper German schnitz, meaning "woodcutter".
Kushwaha Indian
Kushwaha (sometimes, Kushvaha) is a community of the Indo-Gangetic plain which has traditionally been involved in agriculture. The term has been used to represent at least four subcastes, being those of the Kachhis, Kachwahas, Koeris and Muraos... [more]
Hinode Japanese
日 (Hi) means "Sun, Day", ノ (No) is a particle, 出 (De) means "Come Out". This surname means "Sunrise" in Japanese. It is uncommon, as a last name and a first name as well.
Lepine French
From Old French espine "thorn bush".
Marouf Arabic
From the given name Maruf.
Aasmaa Estonian
Aasmaa is an Estonian surname meaning "grassy (lea) land".
Thirring Upper German (Rare)
The name Thirring has many different forms/variant spellings. These include Thiering, Thiring, Thuring,Thuringer, Turinger, Duringer, Diringer, Diring and During. One of the reasons for all the variant spellings is that the church scribes in Hungary originally all recorded the name differently... [more]
Lumbangaol Batak
From Batak lumban meaning "village, hamlet" and gaol meaning "banana".
Lou Chinese
From Chinese 楼 (lóu) meaning "storey, level, building".
Bob French
From the given name Bob.
Hanasawa Japanese
Haha means "flower, blossom" and sawa means "swamp, marsh".
Befu Japanese
Variant reading of Beppu.
Şengül Turkish
From Turkish şen meaning "happy, cheerful" and gül meaning "rose".
Grosvenor English
English surname of Norman origin meaning ‘the master huntsman’. Derived from Le Grand Veneur, this title was held by Hugh d'Avranches who accompanied William the Conqueror in the Norman invasion of England in 1066.
Soldner German
German surname meaning mercenary. German spelling has umlaut over the O, but American spelling is Soldner or Soeldner.
Mainé Catalan
Variant of Mainer.
Yataba Japanese (Rare)
Variant reading of Japanese Kanji 八田羽 (see Hattawa).
Redmond Irish
From the given name Redmond.
Yanqi Chinese
Yanqi is/ was a county of China. It is also the surname of Mao Yanqi, also known as VAVA.
Fett Popular Culture
Last Name of Bounty hunters Jango and Boba Fett from STAR WARS.
Kogi Japanese (Rare)
Variant transcription of Kōgi.
Florido Spanish, Italian, Portuguese
Derived from the given name Floridus.
Zakareishvili Georgian
Meaning unknown.
Cazacu Romanian
From the name of the Cazacu River which flows through Romania.
Vergine Italian
Italian form of Virgo.
Hutajulu Batak
From Batak huta meaning "village, area" and julu meaning "upstream".
Trueba Spanish
This indicates familial origin within the vicinity of the eponymous Castilian river.
Clerihew Scottish
A Scottish surname of unknown origin and meaning. A clerihew is a humorous or satirical verse consisting of two rhyming couplets in lines of irregular metre about someone who is named in the poem. It was invented by the British author Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956; Clerihew was his mother's maiden name)... [more]
Cam Vietnamese
Vietnamese form of Gan, from Sino-Vietnamese 甘 (cam).
Hin Khmer
Meaning uncertain.
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".
Bréhant Breton
Refers to a place of the same name in Côtes-d'Armor.
Juli German
Derived from the given name Julius.
MacLaine Scottish
Variant form of McLean. A well-known bearer is American actress, singer and former dancer Shirley MacLaine (1934-).
Pereyro Galician
It's a Galician surname and it means apple tree.
Salae Thai (Muslim)
From the given name Salae, a Thai form of Salih.
Mckeon Irish
Means son of Eoghan.
Timmons Irish
Reduced anglicisation of Gaelic Mac Toimín meaning "son of Toimín" (a pet form of Tomás, itself a Gaelic form of Thomas)... [more]
Grzyb Polish
Meaning "mushroom", a nickname for an old man or simpleton, or signifying someone whose profession involved mushrooms.
Van Haitsma Dutch
Habitational name for someone from Haitsma, a place in Friesland.
Fiadura Belarusian
Derived from an augmentative form of the Belarusian given name Fiodar.
Goedhart Dutch
Means "good heart" in Dutch, a nickname for a kind person. Could also be an altered form of the given name Gotthard
Voytek Polish, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian
Americanized spelling of the given names VOJTEK, Vojtech, Wojtek, all pet forms of the Polish given name Wojciech, or other Slavic cognates.
Erhart German
From the given name Erhard.
Hoogland Dutch
A toponoymic or habitational surname meaning "highland", derived from Middle Dutch hooch "high" and lant "land".
Katzir Hebrew
Occupational name derived from Hebrew קָצִיר (qatsiyr) meaning ""harvesting, reaping", ultimately from קָצַר (qatsar). A famous bearer was the Israeli president and scientist Ephraim Katzir (1916-2009), born Efraim Katchalski.
Rave Low German, Dutch
Variant form of Rabe and Raaf, both meaning "raven".
Hayase Japanese
From Japanese 早 (haya) meaning "already, now" and 瀬 (se) meaning "rapids, current".
Veral English
Meaning:stubborn,aggressive,mathamatician smart
Mendarozketa Basque
It indicates familial origin within the eponymous council of the municipality of Zigoitia.
Maitre French
occupational name for one who was the head of a craft or trade guild, from Old French maistre ‘master’ (Latin magister).
Soprano Italian
For soprano "higher, situated above", a topographic name for someone who lived at the top end of a place on a hillside.
Saluorg Estonian
Saluorg is an Estonian surname meaning "grove valley".
Scheunemann German
It literally means someone who either lives near (or in, if poor &/or homeless) a barn or works within its general vicinity.
Felber German
Middle High German residential name "velwer" meaning Willow Tree.
Guta Bosnian
Possibly a mispronunciation of the Bosnian word for the verb "gutati" (to swallow) or "guta" (swallowing).
Alfstad Norwegian (Rare)
Possibly a combination of the given name Alf 1 and stad "city, town".
Wayman English
Variant of Wyman and Waitman. Could also be the Americanized version of Wehmann or Weidmann
Macnicol Scottish
A Scottish surname meaning "Son of the conquering people"
Suleiman Arabic
From the given name Sulayman.
Persen Norwegian
Norwegian form of Persson.
Saengarun Thai
Means "dawn, aurora" in Thai.
Soroka Ukrainian, Jewish
From the nickname Soroka meaning "magpie", which indicates a thievish person or a person with a white streak of hair among black hair.
Wijetunga Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala විජේතුංග (see Wijethunga).
Cherian Indian (Christian)
From the given name Cherian.
Negahban Persian
Means "watchman, guard, sentry, sentinel" in Persian.
Chikuchishin Japanese (Rare)
Variant reading of Japanese Kanji 築地新 (see Tsukijishin).
Pies German
From a variant of the given name Pius.
Hirokawa Japanese
From Japanese 広 or 廣 (hiro) meaning "broad, wide, spacious" and 川 (kawa) meaning "river, stream".
Rajani Indian, Urdu, Hindi, Marathi, Nepali, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Bengali, Malaysian
Meaning unknown, either from the titles Rajan, Raja, or Raj, or from the given name Rajani.
Calimeris Greek
It can be Kalimeris as well and it means good morning.
Payán Spanish
Possibly derived from Mozarabic päiên meaning "cave ravine", ultimately from Latin pedem meaning "foot".
Cogotti Italian
From Sardinian cogotto "cockerel, rooster".
Croy Irish (Anglicized)
A shortened form of the surname McRoy, from Irish Gaelic Mac Rúaidh "son of Ruadh", literally "the red one".
Fazli Persian
From the given name Fazl.
Jayathilake Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala ජයතිලක (see Jayathilaka).
Piñeiro Galician
Galician cognate of Pinheiro.
Acollador Filipino
Lanyard in Spanish
Kawanichi Japanese
Kawa means "river, stream" and nichi means "sun, day".
Padgett English
Diminutive form of Page, which is of Old French origin, and an occupational name for a young servant, a personal attendant in a noble's house, from the Old French, Middle English "page", ultimately deriving from the Greek "paidion", a boy, child... [more]
Fossi Italian
Variant of Fossa.
Hafsteinsdóttir Icelandic
Means "daughter of Hafsteinn" in Icelandic.
Kenapea Estonian
Kenapea is an Estonian surname meaning "beautiful head".
Rossing Norwegian
ross (came from scotland) ing - added in Norway
Magnus Various
From the given name Magnus.
Blazkowicz Polish
From the video game series, Wolfenstein, Blazkowicz is the main character.
Rudyard English
From the location Rudyard (Staffs) which is recorded as Rudegeard in 100 The place-name probably derives from Old English rude "rue" and geard "enclosure yard".
Soylu Turkish
Means "noble" in Turkish.
Rybski Polish
Occupational name for a fisherman.
Kreiter Low German (Rare)
meanings: "quarreler", "argumentative person", "legal counsel"... [more]
Almenara Spanish
Almenara in Spanish is "beacon", but it is an old kind of beacon that consisted of a fire that was lit on top of the battlements to give a signal.
Ochitani Japanese
From 落 (ochi) meaning "fall, leave behind, drop" and 谷 (tani) meaning "valley".
Idou Japanese
"This wisteria".
Arlegi Basque
From the name of a town in Navarre, Spain, of uncertain etymology. Possibly derived from Basque (h)egi "slope, hillside; edge, border" combined with either (h)arri "stone", arlo "field", or erle "bee" as a first element.
Fawzi Arabic
From the given name Fawzi
Barrington English, Irish
English: habitational name from any of several places called Barrington. The one in Gloucestershire is named with the Old English personal name Beorn + -ing- denoting association + tun ‘settlement’... [more]
Scanavacca Italian
Possibly an occupational name for a butcher, from scannare "to slaughter, to cut the throat of" and vacca "cow".
Erdőtelek Hungarian
Derived from Erdőtelek, a village in Heves County, Hungary.
Vongsouthi Lao
From Lao ວົງ (wong) meaning "lineage, family" and ສຸທິ (suthi) meaning "wise man, sage, scholar".
Kyoso Japanese
From Japanese 狂 (kyō) meaning "madness" and 想 (sō) meaning "thought, idea". The kanji that makes up Kyoso can also mean "fantasy".
Malfoi French
Variant of Malfoy.
Erasylov Kazakh
Means "son of Erasyl" in Kazakh.
Shahbazpour Persian
Means "son of Shahbaz".
Bratushka Ukrainian, Russian (?)
Means "(younger, little) brother".
Traynor English
Derives from old English word 'trayne' which means to trap or to snare. Also an occupational name given to horse trainers. First found in Yorkshire, England in the 1300s.
Ahapiy Ukrainian
From given name Ahapiy.
Leivat Estonian
Leivat is an Estonian surname derived from "leivatehas" meaning "baker" ("bread maker").
Robinsen Norwegian, Danish
Means "son of Robin".
Seely Medieval English
Means "Blessed", "Happy", and/or "Lucky." By adding an Un- to Seely makes it "Unblessed", "Unhappy", and/or "Unholy." Used primarily in Northern England and Southern Scotland during the Middle English period but is derived from the Old English sǣl and gesǣlig... [more]
Kyono Japanese (Rare)
Variant transcription of Japanese Kanji 皛納 (see Kyōnō).
Bosoy Russian
Derived from Russian босой (bosoy) meaning "barefoot". This may have been a nickname for a low-class person.
Eckhoff German
Derived from Middle Low German ecke meaning "corner, far end of a village", and hof meaning "farm, manor".
Vincenzo Italian
From the given name Vincenzo
Chetcuti Maltese
Derived from Arabic كتكوت‎‎ (katkūt) meaning "(newborn) chick, young chicken".
Santayana Spanish, Spanish (Philippines)
Spanish variant of Santana. This name was borne by the Spanish-American philosopher George Santayana (1863-1952).
Pierrin French
From the given name Pierre.
Makhluf Arabic
Derived from the given name Makhluf.
Simko Hungarian
From a pet form of the given name Simon 1.
Asato Japanese (Rare)
There are several readings for the name but 2 are Asa:"Morning",and To:"Door,Asa:"Safe" and To:"Village". There are multiple places in the Ryukyu's (where the name originates and mostly stays) that have that name;that could've been the influence... [more]
Greenhill English
The name is derived from a geographic locality, "at the green hill", or rather, more specifically of "Greenhill". The surname could also derive from the liberty on the wapentake of Corringham in Lincolnshire, or a hamlet in the parish of Harrow in Middlesex... [more]
Kõo Estonian
Kõo is an Estonian surname derived from "kõu" meaning "thunder".
Rakhmaninov Russian
From a nickname derived from Russian рахманный (rakhmannyy) meaning "lazy". A notable bearer was Russian composer, pianist and conductor Sergei Rakhmaninov (1873-1943).
Tough Scottish, English
Scottish variant of Tulloch. In Scotland it is pronounced tyookh. ... [more]
Kuldvee Estonian
Kuldvee is an Estonian surname meaning "gold water".
Bizon Polish
Nickname from bizon meaning "whip", used for a big, ponderous person.
Tonnelier French
Means "cooper" in French, from Middle French tonnel "barrel".
Brooksby English
Means "farm by a brook". From Old English broc "brook, small stream" and Old Norse býr "farm, settlement"
Hinshelwood Scottish, English
Denoted a person from a lost place called Henshilwood near the village of Carnwath on the southern edge of the Pentland Hills of South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It is derived from Scots hainchil obscurely meaning "haunch" and Old English wudu meaning "wood"... [more]
Ko Korean
There is only one Chinese character for the surname Ko. There are ten different Ko clans, but they are all descended from the Ko clan of Cheju Island. There is no historical information regarding the founder of this clan, but there is a legend which tells of three men who appeared from a cave on the north side of Cheju Island’s Halla Mountain... [more]
Pähkel Estonian
Pähkel is an Estonian surname meaning "nut".
Akhter Persian, Urdu, Bengali
Alternate transcription of Akhtar.
Draak Dutch
Dutch cognate of Drake.
Kempton English
From the name of a place in Shropshire meaning "Cempa's town" or "warrior town", from a combination of either the Old English word cempa "warrior" or the byname derived from it and tun "farmstead, settlement".
Kratt German
German metonymic occupational name for a ''basketmaker'', from Middle High German kratte ''basket''.
Hashempour Persian
Means "son of Hashem".
Kusama Japanese
From Japanese 草 (kusa) meaning "grass, herbs" and 間 (ma) meaning "among, between".
Həbibzadə Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Habibzadeh.
Marler English (British)
The name Marler might be loosely tied to marl, the type of crumbly clay made up of sand, silt, or clay. The name Marler likely means to mine marl, so they were called Marlers.
Lacasse French
Means "box maker"
Quimson Filipino
From Hokkien 金孫 (kim-sun) meaning "golden grandchild".
Žiak Slovak
Žiak means "school boy" in Slovak
Bakunina Russian
feminine form of Bakunin
Kmet Slovene, Serbian, Croatian, Slovak
Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, and Slovak status name for a type of peasant. In Slovenia this denoted a peasant who had his own landed property. In Serbia and elsewhere it was a status name for a feudal peasant farmer who cultivated the land of his lord instead of paying rent or doing military service... [more]
Ramanayake Sinhalese
From the name of the Hindu god Rama 1 combined with Sanskrit नायक (nayaka) meaning "hero, leader".
Arford German
Derived from town of Erfurt, Germany
Holiday English
Variation of Holladay.
Mesbah Arabic (Maghrebi), Arabic (Egyptian)
Derived from Arabic مِصْبَاح (miṣbāḥ) meaning "lamp, light, luminary".
Del Negro Italian
Literally “of or belonging to the black one” hence a name denoting the son, apprentice, associate, or servant of a man bearing this nickname or ethnic name.
Braunschweig German, Jewish
Denoted a person from the city of Braunschweig in Lower Saxony, Germany, which is of Old Saxon origin meaning "Bruno's settlement".
Oglethorpe English
It indicates familial origin within the civil parish of Bramham cum Oglethorpe in the West Riding of Yorkshire.
Dux German (Rare), Hungarian (Rare)
From Latin dux, meaning “duke”.
Raimond Estonian, Dutch, French, Croatian
From the given name Raimond.
Galbraith Scottish, Scottish Gaelic
Ethnic name for someone descended from a tribe of Britons living in Scotland, from Gaelic gall ‘stranger’ + Breathnach ‘Briton’ (i.e. ‘British foreigner’). These were either survivors of the British peoples who lived in Scotland before the Gaelic invasions from Ireland in the 5th century (in particular the Welsh-speaking Strathclyde Britons, who survived as a distinctive ethnic group until about the 14th century), or others who had perhaps migrated northwestwards at the time of the Anglo-Saxon invasions.
Gentry French
From the English word, which is in turn from French gentrie, referring to that which is "noble," or the "nobility." From earlier gentillece, which was originally from gentil, "refinement."
Fukashi Japanese (Rare)
Variant reading of Japanese Kanji 奥 (see Oku 3.
Vaino Estonian
Vaino is an Estonian surname, derived from the patronymic given name Vaino.
Rozman Jewish
Variant of Rosman. Slovenian (also Rožman): occupational name for a carter or a horse breeder or dealer, from Middle High German ros 'horse' + man 'man'. Compare German Rossmann.
South English
From Middle English south, hence a topographic name for someone who lived to the south of a settlement or a regional name for someone who had migrated from the south.
Cadieli Romansh
Derived from Romansh casa "house" and, by extension, "household, family" and the given name Gieli.
Jesten Dutch
Variation of Joosten.
Vremec Slovene
Derived from Vreme, a valley in western Slovenia.
Matracia Sicilian
Family from Termini-Imerese, Sicily.
Véron French
There are three etymologies possible for this surname: which one applies, will vary per Véron family, as the meaning depends on the personal history of the original bearer of their surname.... [more]
Derwin English
Variant of Darwin.
Fernald English
Altered form of French Fernel.
Ansar Arabic, Urdu
Derived from the given name Ansar.
Mykytenko Ukrainian
Means "son of Mykyta".
Korolev Russian
From korol, meaning "king".
Dayan Hebrew
Means "judge" in Hebrew.
Uba Estonian
Uba is an Estonian surname meaning "bean".
Uslu Turkish
Means "well-behaved, obedient" in Turkish.
Asaf Hebrew
From the given name Asaf.
Kayano Japanese (Rare), Brazilian
Kaya means "yew tree",and No means "field,meadow,wilderness".People with this last name are Kayano Gonbei (a samurai),Ai Kayano(a voice actress of MANY characters /more than 30),and Shigeru Kayano(an Ainu politician who lived well up to 2006)... [more]
Renda Italian
Derived from the short form of a variant of Latin Laurentius (compare Renza), or perhaps from a feminine variant of Germanic Rando... [more]
Pilipović Bosnian, Croatian
means "son of Pilip"... [more]
Oglethorpe English
From Oglethorpe Hall in Bramham (WR Yorks) which is recorded as Ocelestorp in 1086 and Okelesthorp in 124 The place-name derives from the Old Scandinavian personal name Oddkell and Old Scandinavian or Old English þorp "secondary settlement outlying farmstead" meaning "Oddkell's village" the surname derived from oddr "point of a weapon" and ketill "cauldron".
Remig German (Rare)
Derived from the given name Remigius.
Florêncio Portuguese
From the given name Florêncio
Regar Batak
Variant of Siregar.
Kishida Japanese
From Japanese 岸 (kishi) meaning "beach, shore, bank" and 田 (ta) meaning "field, rice paddy".
Lamichhane Nepali
Means "long roof" from Nepali लामो (lāmo) meaning "long" and छाना (chānā) meaning "roof". It was traditionally used to refer to families that lived in houses with longer roofs.
Majhi Indian, Odia, Bengali, Hindi, Assamese
Possibly from the Bengali মাঝি (mājhi) meaning "boatman, oarsman, waterman".
Pennyworth English
From Old English pening, penig meaning "penny (the coin)" and worþ meaning "enclosure". A notable fictional bearer is Alfred Pennyworth, a DC Comics character notable for being the butler of the superhero Batman.
Bi Chinese
From Chinese 毕 (bì) referring to the ancient fief of Bi, which existed during the Zhou dynasty in what is now Shaanxi province.