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.
Cinardo Italian
From Italy
Vihar Hungarian
Hungarian for "storm".
Bierbaum German
German: topographic name for someone who lived by a pear tree, Middle Low German berbom. Compare Birnbaum.
Feiler German
Occupational name for a filemaker, from Feil + the agent suffix -er.
Lundsten Swedish
Combination of Swedish lund "grove" and sten "stone".
Le Roux French
Nickname for a person with red hair, from Old French rous "red." Variant spelling of Leroux.
Priest English
Derived from the occupation priest, which is a minister of a church. It could also be a nickname for a person who is / was a priest.
Obayashi Japanese
Alternate transcription of Japanese Kanji 大林 (see Ōbayashi).
Veel Estonian
Veel is an Estonian surname meaning "still", "again", and "heretofore".
Hirvonen Finnish
Derived from Finnish hirvi "elk, moose".
Herbenko Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Gerbov.
Imamović Bosnian
Means "son of the imam", from Arabic إِمَام (ʾimām) referring to a Muslim leader.
Reinsalu Estonian
Reinsalu is an Estonian surname derived from "Rein" (a masculine given name) and "salu", meaning grove; "Rein's grove".
Orange French, English
Habitational name from various places named "Orange".
Petronio Italian
From the given name Petronio.
Çayır Turkish
Means "meadow, pasture" in Turkish.
Berliński Polish, Jewish
Habitational name for someone from the city of Berlin in Germany.
Čaklais Latvian
Means "the diligent one".
Morabito Italian
Ultimately from Arabic مُرَابِط (murabit) "holy man, one who preaches in the street; soldier stationed in an outpost", from which comes Sicilian murabitu "moderate, sober" and murabbiu "teetotal".
Sachse German
Variant of Sachs.
Del Rancho Spanish (Mexican)
Name given to a rancher or someone from a ranch.
Taka Japanese
From Japanese taka, meaning "high, tall". Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Hougan Irish
Variant of Hogan.
Aney English
English surname of uncertain origin, though it has been suggested that this is an anglicized form of French Ané. Ané itself is said to be taken from a personal name, possibly a gallicized form of Asnar or Aznar, which may be derived from Latin asinarius meaning "keeper of asses, ass-driver", from asinus "ass".
Grinder English
Occupational name for a grinder.
Ferneyhough Anglo-Saxon
The surname Ferneyhough is of Anglo-Saxon origin and is a topographic surname for someone who lived in a "Fernhöhle," which translates to a distance hollow or cave. The name is derived from the Old English words "fearn," meaning fern, before the 7th century, and "hol(h)," meaning hollow or depression in the ground... [more]
Tanimatsu Japanese
From Japanese 谷 (tani) meaning "valley" and 松 (matsu) meaning "pine tree, fir tree".
Akanuma Japanese
Aka means "red" and numa means "swamp, marsh".
Ciocca Italian
The origin has to do with hair
Imakiire Japanese
Variant of Kiire but written 給黎 and added Japanese 今 (ima) meaning "now; present".
Imashiro Japanese
From 今 (ima) meaning "now, present" and 城 (shiro) meaning "castle".
Beas Spanish (Mexican)
Spanish (common in Mexico): habitational name from any of the places in Andalusia named Beas.
Rathgeber German
From Middle High German ratgebe or Middle Low German ratgever "giver of advice, counselor", an occupational name for an adviser or wise man.
Stambouli Arabic (Maghrebi)
Habitational name for someone originally from Istanbul, Turkey.
Wallen English
Originated from the Old English words "waellan" or "weallan," which mean "to boil" or "to bubble." It is thought that the name may have been used to describe someone who lived near a boiling spring or a bubbling brook.
Roka Japanese
Japanese name meaning "White crest of the wave".
Gere English
Variant of Geer, Gehr or Geary, all related to the Old High German element gēr (Old English gār, Old Norse geirr) meaning "spear, arrow". A famous bearer is American actor Richard Gere (b... [more]
Oiartzun Basque
From the name of a town and municipality in Basque Country, Spain, possibly derived from the nearby Roman town Oiasso (also called Oiarso), the name of which may have been applied to the entire surrounding region... [more]
Santorum Italian
Variant of Santoro, from Latin sanctorum "of the saints". A notable bearer is former American Senator Rick Santorum (1958-present).
Canella Italian
Probably a variant spelling of Cannella.
Sadat German (Rare)
The last name Sadat means "master" and "gentleman," and is originally a religious last name which was popular in the west, more precisely in Germany.
Lozada Spanish
Variant of Lozano.
Dolle German (?)
“Dolle is a German word for a specific type of lock used on boats and also a small town in Germany”
Beekman Dutch, German (Americanized)
Means "creek man" in Dutch, a topographic name for a person who lived by a creek, or an Americanized form of the German cognate Beekmann.
Friedmann German, German (Swiss), Jewish (Ashkenazi)
German and Swiss German from a derivative of Friedrich. ... [more]
Coley English
With variant Colley can mean "dark" or "blackbird" or it can be a nickname for Nicholas.
Speier Germanic
Habitational name from Speyer.
Joffre French
Derived from the medieval personal name Gautfred.
Van Velsen Dutch
Means "from Velsen" in Dutch, a municipality in North Holland, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *pel "swamp, marsh" combined with the hydronymic suffix *isa.
Aasmäe Estonian
Possibly derived from Estonian aas "meadow, lea" and mäe "mountain, hill".
Pupillo Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
From the given name Pupillo.
Maksym Ukrainian, Polish
From the given name Maksym.
Jarnot French
Variant of Garneau.
Zheleznyak Ukrainian
Means "ironworker" in Ukrainian.
Thomsen English
A variant of Thompson, meaning "Son of Thomas".
D'coolette French
Not known. A Character from Sonic The Hedgehog, Has This name.
Arditti Italian
Possibly a variant form of Arditi.
Pinkney English
Variant spelling of Pinckney.
Kabu Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 蕪 (kabu) meaning "brassica rapa".
Pisula Polish, Lithuanian
Informal nickname for a scribe or clerk, from a derivative of Polish pisać ‘to write’.
Elphee English
Derived from the Old English given name Ælfwig.
Eskesen Danish
Means “Son of Eske”.
Alaoui Arabic (Maghrebi)
From the given name Ali 1. This is the name of the current ruling royal family of Morocco, which was founded in 1631.
Abidaoud Arabic
Arabic surname meaning "son of Dawud".
Snowe English
Variation of Snow.
Blin Welsh
The same as Blaen, a point, the inland extremity of a valley. Blin also signifies weary, troublesome.
Kapilakanjana Thai
It is a surname bestowed upon the reign of King Rama VI of the Thai Chakri Dynasty.
Argue Irish
Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Mac Giolla Fhearga, though it could be derived from Ó hEarga.
Varvaruk Ukrainian
From the feminine given name Varvara.
Trigano Judeo-Spanish
From the name of the town of Tàrrega in Lleida province, Spain.
Shafik Arabic
Derived from the given name Shafiq.
Avramov Bulgarian
Means "son of Avram".
Pablo Spanish
From the given name Pablo.
Heinla Estonian
Heinla is an Estonian surname meaning "hay area".
Tsikunib Circassian (Russified)
Derived from Adyghe цӏыкӏу (c̣əḳ°) meaning "little" and ныбэ (nəbă) meaning "stomach, belly".
Keränen Finnish
Possibly from Keräpää, a nickname for a bald person or someone with a round head and/or with closely cropped hair, combined with the common surname suffix -nen. In eastern Finland the name dates back to the 16th century.
Ying Chinese
From Chinese 应 (yīng) referring to the ancient state of Ying, which existed during the Zhou dynasty in what is now Henan province.
Sivitanidis Greek
From the Latin word (civitanus)
Rodger English
From the given name Rodger.
Isaac Jewish, English, Welsh, French
Derived from the given name Isaac.
Dolgikh Russian
From долгий (dolgiy]) meaning "long".
Tacza Polish
Deppreciation of TARCZA which means shield in Polish.
Aldridge English
habitational name from a place in the West Midlands called Aldridge; it is recorded in Domesday Book as Alrewic, from Old English alor ‘alder’ + wīc ‘dwelling’, ‘farmstead’.
Beauvoir English
From the surname of Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986), a French feminist and philosopher.
Eissa Arabic (Egyptian)
From the given name Isa 1.
Abrey English
Variant of Aubrey.
Amadeo Italian
From the given name Amadeo.
Neuwirth German
German and Jewish (Ashkenazic): nickname for a new innkeeper, from Middle High German niuwe ‘new’ + wirt and German neu + Wirt ‘master of a house’, ‘innkeeper’.
Gadbury English
Habitational name from Cadborough, alias Gateborough, in Rye, Sussex, probably so named from Old English gāt meaning "goat" + beorg meaning "hill".
Araya Japanese
From Japanese 荒 (ara) meaning "rough, wild" and 谷 (ya) meaning "valley".
Liivamägi Estonian
Liivamägi is an Estonian surname meaning "sand mountain".
Ker Scottish
Variant of Kerr.
Montgomerie Scottish, English
Variation of Montgomery. A famous bearer was Margaret Montgomerie Boswell (1738 to 1789), wife of author James Boswell.
Benz German
South German: (in Alemannic areas) from a short form of the Germanic personal name Berthold, or to a lesser extent of Bernhard
Köth German
From Middle High German, Middle Low German kote ‘cottage’, ‘hovel’, a status name for a day laborer who lived in a cottage and owned no farmland.
Feldwick English (Rare)
Descendant of one who lived on a farm or field.... [more]
Morgade Spanish
Derived from Portuguese morgado "firstborn, heir".
Khoo Chinese (Hokkien)
Hokkien spellig of the surname Qiu. This Means a person who lived near a mound, dune or hill. This spelling is found amongst Hokkien and Hakka families in Southeast Asia
Dischinger German
Habitational name for someone from Dischingen near Neresheim or Oberdischingen near Ehingen in Württemberg.
Kareluša Serbian
Famous bearer of this surname is Serbian singer Jelena Kareluša (1978-)
Sjöström Swedish
Ornamental name composed of Swedish sjö "lake, sea" and ström "stream, small river".
Schauble German
Diminutive of Scaub
Carrasquillo Spanish
The surname Carrasquillo is of Spanish origin and it is derived from the word "carrasca" which means "holm oak". Therefore, the name roughly translates to "a place where there are holm oaks".
Randhawa Pakistani, Indian, Punjabi, Indian (Sikh)
Meaning unknown. This is the name of a Sikh and Jat tribe in Punjab.
Ledda Italian, Sardinian
Probably from the former Medieval town of Lella, in northern Sardinia. The transformation of -ll- into -dd- is common in Sardinian.
Liiv Estonian
Means "sand" in Estonian.
Glebov Russian
Means "son of Gleb".
Zubenko Ukrainian
From Ukrainian зуб (zub), meaning "tooth".
Alaväli Estonian
Alaväli is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region field".
Hoddson French
Variation of the surname, HODSON.
Becraft English (American)
English, variant of Beecroft. topographic name for someone who lived at a place where bees were kept, from Middle English bee ‘bee’ + croft ‘paddock’, ‘smallholding’.
Piroćanac Serbian
Habitational name for someone from Pirot, Serbia.
Safarpoor Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian صفرپور (see Safarpour).
Rammus Estonian
Rammus is an Estonian surname meaning "fat", "nourishing" and "fertile".
Peymani Persian
From the given name Peyman.
Chiere French (Rare)
Possibly derived from the Old French chiere, from chier, meaning "dear, dearest".
Lubis Batak
From the name of an area around Lake Toba, itself from a Batak word meaning "strong".
Lại Vietnamese
Vietnamese form of Lai, from Sino-Vietnamese 賴 (lại).
Saarsalu Estonian
Saarsalu is an Estonian surname meaning "island grove".
Uzaki Japanese, Popular Culture
From Japanese, 宇 (u) meaning "world, universe, space" combined with 崎 (zaki) meaning "cape, peninsula". A fictional bearer of this surname is Hana Uzaki (宇崎 花) from Uzaki~chan Wants to Hang Out! (宇崎ちゃんは遊びたい!).
Sénéchal French
Variant of Sénécal, a status name for a seneschal an official in a large household who was responsible for overseeing day-to-day domestic arrangements from Old French seneschal (of ancient Germanic origin composed of the elements sini "old" and scalc "servant").
Scuderi Sicilian
Patronymic form of Scudero, a status name equivalent to English Squire, from scudero "shield-bearer", Latin scutarius, an agent derivative of scutum "shield"... [more]
Wickstrand Swedish (Rare), Finnish (Rare)
Variant of Wikstrand, a surname composed of Swedish vik "bay" and strand "beach".
Kangjeong Korean (Archaic)
Meaning unknown. Surname for 50 koreans, very archaic.
Kiel Dutch
From Middle Dutch kidel, kedel "smock", hence a metonymic occupational name for someone who make such garments or perhaps a nickname for someone who habitually wore one. Also a Dutch habitational name from a place so named in Antwerp or from the German city Kiel in Schleswig-Holstein.
Cuddihy Irish (Anglicized)
Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Cuidighthigh meaning "descendant of Cuidightheach".
Brito Portuguese
The Brito family has its original roots in the village of Brito, around 1033 of the Christian era, where Dom Hero de Brito, lord of many estates in Oliveira, Carrazelo and Subilhães, all located between the Ave River and Portela dos Leitões, a very rich region and where the Solar dos Brito was located.
Tinks English
Variant of Tink.
Løkken Norwegian
Habitational name from any of numerous farmsteads so called. Derived from Old Norse lykkja "enclosure".
Stampone Italian
Meaning uncertain. Possibly from Italian stampare "to print, to stamp", or from Tuscan stampo "tree stump".
Mrefu Swahili
From Swahili meaning "tall, long".
Mathiuet Romansh
Derived from the given name Mathiu in combination with a diminutive suffix.
Kapelyukha Ukrainian
From Ukrainian капелюх (kapelyukh), meaning "hat".
Vangarde French
"(A soldier) in the leading edge of an army formation"
Mike Hungarian
Fro, a pet form of the personal name Miklós, Hungarian form of Nicholas, or possibly from a short form of Mihály, Hungarian form of Michael.
Ó Daighre Irish
Means "descendant of Daighre"
Keeth Irish
A Scottish and Irish place surname meaning "forest" or "wood" or "windy place".
Ecklund Swedish (Anglicized)
Americanized form of Eklund.
Carhartt English, Cornish
Habitational name from Carhart in Cornwall, possibly derived from Old English carr "rock, stone". Could also be an Americanized form of German Gerhardt.
Vitryanyuk Ukrainian
Derived from Ukrainian вітряний (vitryanyy), meaning "windy".
Reveille French
Derived from Old French reveille "lively, vivid; alert".
Tsukii Japanese
Tsuki means "moon, month" and i means "well, mineshaft."
Ananyan Armenian, Jewish
Means "son of Anan 2".
O'Neil Irish
Variant of O'Neal.
Križaj Slovene
Means "crucify" in Slovene.
Cabanting Cebuano
From Cebuano banting meaning "brace, support, holdfast".
Elgezabal Basque
From the name of a neighborhood in the municipality of Zornotza, Spain, derived from Basque elge "field, cultivated land" and zabal "wide, broad, open".
Panteli Greek
From the given name Pantelis.
Bodén Swedish
Probably a combination of Swedish bod meaning either "small shop, boutique" or "shed, shack", and the common surname suffix -én.
Tennojiya Japanese (Rare)
Variant transcription of Japanese Kanji 天王寺谷 (see Tennōjiya).
Copp English
Derived from Old English copp "top, summit; crown (of the head)", a topographic name for someone who lived at the top of a hill, or perhaps a nickname for someone with an oddly-shaped head.
Gunarathne Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala ගුණරත්න (see Gunaratne).
Akinuma Japanese
Aki can mean "autumn", and numa means "swamp, marsh".
Alkış Turkish
Means "applause, acclamation" in Turkish.
Boyajyan Armenian
Means "son of the painter" from Armenian պոյաճի (poyači) meaning "dyer, painter".
Ruszczak Polish
From the verb ruszać with numerous potential meanings—"to move; to set out", "to shake; to waver", "to bother; to harass" or "to disturb someone else's belongings"—or from Rus meaning either "reddish-haired person" or "Ruthenian; Rusyn".
Rosenbaum German, Czech
Habitational name for someone who lived at a house distinguished by the sign of a rosebush, Middle High German rōsenboum.
Abdolkarimi Persian
From the given name Abdolkarim.
Nishi Japanese
From Japanese 西 (nishi) meaning "west".
Daitol Filipino, Cebuano
Means "touch a small part (of something)" in Cebuano.
Cholevas Greek
Feminine form is Choleva
Allaoui Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Alaoui.
Bestauty Ossetian
Derived from Ossetian бистэ (biste) meaning "village, suburb" or from Persian به (beh) meaning "good, excellent, better". In the case of the former, it would have been used to indicate the place of residence of an ancestor.
Ferhatović Bosnian
Means "son of Ferhat".
Zebua Nias
Nias clan name possibly from a word meaning "biggest, largest".
Myatt English
From the medieval personal name Myat, literally "little Mihel", an Anglo-Norman variant of Michael.
Aissi Arabic (Maghrebi)
Derived from the given name Isa 1.
Borcha Aragonese
Proper, non-Castilianized form of Borja; it indicates familial origin within the eponymous municipality.
Engram English
Variant of Ingram.
Plyushchenko Ukrainian
Derieved from Ukrainian плющ (plyushch), meaning "ivy".
Dukeshire English
Probably a combination of Duke and Shire.
Mahdipour Persian
Means "son of Mahdi".
Nazaire French
From the given name Nazaire.
Saimu Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 宰 (sai) meaning "superintend" and 務 (mu) meaning "task; duty", referring to someone who would supervise or administer others.
Ebisu Japanese, Japanese Mythology
This name most likely comes from the god Ebisu, his name being spelled in numerous ways, one of them being 戎 (ebisu) meaning "arms" or 蛭 (ebi, hiru) meaning "leech" and 子 (ko, su) meaning "child, sign of the rat"... [more]
Goff Welsh
Variant of Gough 1.
Ratnasiri Sinhalese, Thai
Derived from Sanskrit रत्न (ratna) meaning "jewel, treasure" and श्री (shri) meaning "diffusing light, radiance, splendour, beauty"... [more]
Lang Estonian
Lang is an Estonian surname meaning "relative" and "in-law".
Runner English (American)
Probably an altered spelling of German Ronner, annoccupational name for a runner or messenger, a lightly armed mounted soldier. Compare Renner. UK The surname Runner was first found in Lancashire. One of the first records of the family was found in the year 1246 when Alan de Runacres held estates in that shire... [more]