Browse Submitted Surnames

This is a list of submitted surnames in which the order is random.
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Trinket English, Popular Culture
Effie Trinket's surname: one of "The Hunger Games"'s trilogy character.
Medlicott English
Derivative from a location in Shropshire, England
Noro Japanese
From Japanese 野 (no) meaning "field, rice paddy" and 呂 (ro) meaning "spine, backbone".
Izaba Basque
From the name of a municipality in Navarre, Spain, of uncertain etymology. Proposed origins include Basque iz "water" combined with aba, which could mean "river, mouth, confluence" and/or be a variant of -aga "place of, abundance of".
Mcswain Irish, Scottish
Anglicization of Mac Suibhne.
Look English
Habitational name from Look in Puncknowle, Dorset, named in Old English with luce ‘enclosure’.
Messias Portuguese (Brazilian)
Derived from the given name Messias
Tsumuraya Japanese
From Japanese 津 (tsu) meaning "port, harbour", 村 (mura) meaning "town, village", and 谷 (ya) meaning "valley".
Tatarov m Russian
Means "son of a Tatar".
Molinarolo Italian
Probably from a person's occupation, with molino/mulino meaning "mill" in Italian. The second part may come from rullo, meaning "a roller" or "I roll."
Roots Estonian
Roots is an Estonian surname meaning "leaf stalk" or "stem". May also derive from "rootslane", meaning "Swede".
Kullerkupp Estonian
Kullerkupp is an Estonian surname meaning "globeflower" (Trollius europaeus).
Sanguinetti Italian, Judeo-Italian
From Sanguinetto, the name of two places in Genova and Verona provinces.
Zacatenco Spanish (Mexican)
One who came from Zacatecas.
Oosterweghel Dutch
Derived from the Dutch words ooster "east" and weg "road".
Milan Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Slovene, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Russian
From the given name Milan, a derivative of names such as Bohumil and Miloslav, containing the Slavic elements mil or milu meaning ‘grace, favor, dear’.
Shubin Russian
Derived from Russian шуба (shuba) meaning "fur coat".
Palusalu Estonian
Palusalu is an Estonian surname meaning "sandy heath/heathy woodland grove".
Palumets Estonian
Palumets is an Estonian surname meaning "sandy heath/heathy woodland forest".
Vallance English
Means "person from Valence", southeastern France (probably "place of the brave").
Imano Japanese
Ima means "now, present" and no means "field, wilderness, plain".
Vincek Croatian
Possibly derived from the Croatian nickname for Vincent.
Sayavong Lao
From Lao ໄຊ (say) meaning "victory" and ວົງ (vong) meaning "lineage, family".
Lace Manx
Shortened form of Manx Mac Guilley Chass (Gaelic Mac Giolla Chais) meaning "son of the curly-haired youth", derived from macc "son", gilla "boy, youth; attendant, servant" and cas "curly, twisted".
Mavris Greek
From the Greek word mavros (black).
Baclan Celtic (Rare)
Form of the surname Backlund
Van Nuffelen Belgian, Flemish
Means "from Huffel", derived from Middle Dutch huffel "hill".
Satake Japanese
From Japanese 佐 (sa) meaning "help, aid" and 竹 (take) meaning "bamboo".
Alnajjar Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic النجار (see Al-najjar).
Vihandi Estonian
Vihandi is an Estonian surname derived from "vihane" meaning "wrathful" and "angry".
Wonka Popular Culture, Literature
Possibly a diminutive of Wonskolaser.
MacNamara Irish
Variant spelling of McNamara.
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".
Norin Swedish
Derived from Swedish nord "north" or nor "small strait".
Heyer English
Variant of Ayer.
Unagi Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 宇 (u) meaning "eaves; roof; house; building" or "whole world; universe" and 梛 (nagi) meaning "nageia nagi".
Mahfouz Arabic
From the given name Mahfuz.
Marciszewski Polish
Habitational name for someone from a place called Marcisze or Marciszów.
Haskell Jewish
From the personal name Khaskl.
Bo Chinese
Nickname from Chinese 薄 (bò) meaning "thin, cold in manner".
Beregovoy Russian
Means "coastal".
Hearns Irish
Variant of Hearn.
Kong Khmer
Means "invulnerable" in Khmer.
Fuyuno Japanese
Fuyu means "winter" and no means "plain, wilderness, field".
Eisner German, Jewish
Occupational name for an ironworker, smith, or ironmonger, from an agent derivative of Middle High German īsen and German Eisen, meaning ‘iron’ (see Eisen).
Sooriyaarachchi Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala සූරීයාරාච්චි (see Suriyaarachchi).
Furth German
German cognate of Ford.
Rafail Greek, Russian
From the given name Rafail.
Zsolnay Hungarian
Hungarian form of the surname Zilinsky.
Ristikivi Estonian
Ristikivi is an Estonian surname meaning "abeam" or "athwart stone".
Hirayama Japanese
From Japanese 平 (hira 2) meaning "level, even, peaceful" and 山 (yama) meaning "mountain".
Wilén Swedish, Finland Swedish, Finnish
Variant of Vilén or Willén (meanings uncertain, they might be variants of the same name).
Adedeji Yoruba
Means "one crown has become two" in Yoruba.
Tanikawa Japanese
From the Japanese 谷 (tani) meaning "valley" and 川 or 河 (kawa) meaning "stream, river."
Lannoy French, Walloon, Flemish
From the various locations in northern France and Belgium called Lannoy. Variant of Delannoy.
Michalczewski Polish
This indicates familial origin within the Masovian village of Michalczew.
Çalhanoğlu Turkish
Patronymic meaning "son of Çalhan".
Natsuki Japanese
Natsu means "summer" and ki means "tree, wood".
Asadullin Tatar, Bashkir
From the given name Asadullah.
Tikka Finnish
Means "woodpecker" in Finnish. Alternatively, it could be from Karelian vernacular forms ending in -tikka, commonly seen in diminutives of many Orthodox names.
Kanwar Indian, Hindi, Punjabi
Derived from Sanskrit कुमार (kumara) meaning "prince".
Settai Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 摂待 (Settai) meaning "Settai", a former village in the former district of Hei in the former Japanese province of Rikuchū in parts of present-day Iwate and Akita in Japan or a division in the same place, in the area of Tarō in the city of Miyako in the prefecture of Iwate in Japan.... [more]
Ostrikov Russian
From ostrik, meaning "sharp".
Aceska f Macedonian
Feminine form of Aceski.
Grześkowiak Polish
Patronymic surname derived from Grzesiek, a diminutive of the given name Grzegorz.
Kolomiyets Ukrainian
Means "a person from Kolomyya". Kolomyya is a city and rayon in the Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine.
Mohammadpoor Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian محمدپور (see Mohammadpour).
Ghougasian Armenian
Alternate transcription of Armenian Ղուկասյան (see Ghukasyan).
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".
Paguirigan Ilocano
From Ilocano irig meaning "to incline, to bend down on one side", referring to a place with leaning trees or plants.
Misora Japanese
Mi means "beautiful" and sora means "sky, heaven".
Adoni Italian
Possibly a patronymic form of the given name Adone, an Italian form of Adonis.
Yoshitake Japanese
From Japanese 吉 (yoshi) meaning "fortune, good luck" and 武 (take) meaning "military, martial".
Escuintla Nahuatl
From Nahuatl Itzcuintlan meaning "abundance or place of dogs".
Krestos Ge'ez
Ge'ez form from Greek given name Christos 1, used as a surname of several Ethiopian emperors.
Cacioppo Italian, Sicilian
Derived from Sicilian cacioppu meaning "dried tree trunk", presumably applied as a nickname for someone with wizened skin, or from caciopu meaning "short-sighted" (derived from Greek kakiopes, literally meaning "having bad eyes").
Sani Arabic, Bengali
Derived from the given name Sani 1.
Alfes Jewish
Official website of the the City of Alfés (in the Province Lleida, Catalonia, Spain) says:... [more]
Duchek Czech
Duchek is short form of name Duchoslav.
Caasi Filipino, Ilocano
Means "pitiful" in Ilocano.
Okimatsu Japanese
Matsu means "pine, fir tree" and oki means "open sea".
Lưu Vietnamese
Vietnamese form of Liu, from Sino-Vietnamese 劉 (lưu).
Travchuk Ukrainian
Either from Ukrainian трава (trava) "grass" or травень (traven') "May (month)", both ultimately deriving from Old Slavic трѣва (trěva) "grass".
Hoskinson English
Patronymic form of Hoskin.
Feuille French
This is actually a standard word in French, correctly pronounce like "furry" without the r's. It means "leaf", or "sheet" (i.e. feuille de papier).
Zhangirov m Kazakh
Means "son of Zhangir".
Wiersma West Frisian
Can be a patronymic form of the given name Wier, a contracted form of Wieger (see also Wiro), or a toponymic surname from West Frisian wier "artificial hill, dwelling mound", a cognate of English weir and Dutch wierde.
MacLaine Scottish
Variant form of McLean. A well-known bearer is American actress, singer and former dancer Shirley MacLaine (1934-).
Tasane Estonian
Tasane is an Estonian surname meaning "flat".
Čiernyšievič Belarusian
Belarusian Latin form of Chernyshevich.
Markos Greek
From the given name Markos.
Farhadpour Persian
Means "son of Farhad".
Tekkel Estonian
Tekkel is an Estonian surname possibly derived from "teke" meaning "origin". "Tekkel" also means "college cap".
Rau Indian
Variant of Rao 1.
Scarlata Italian
Feminine variant of Scarlato.
Külvet Estonian
Külvet is an Estonian surname derived from "külv" meaning "sowing (seeds)" and "seeding".
Milanese Italian
One who came from Milan.
Omurbekova f Kyrgyz
Feminine form of Omurbekov.
Strzelec Polish
Occupational name for a rifleman.
Soman Indian
Indian (Kerala, Tamil Nadu): Hindu name from Sanskrit soma ‘moon’ + the Tamil-Malayalam third-person masculine singular suffix -n. This is only a given name in India, but has come to be used as a family name in the U.S.
Al-hashimi Arabic
From the given name Hashim.
Galasso Italian
In northern Italy it could derive from Piedmontese galàs "rooster" (see Gallo), while in southern Italy it might derive from Greek γάλα (gala) "milk", as a nickname for someone with pale skin.
San Blas Spanish (Canarian)
Means "Saint Blaise" in Spanish.
Joutsen Finnish
Means “swan” in Finnish.
Rétif French
Derived from French rétif "restive; rebellious".
Sekine Japanese
From Japanese 関 (seki) meaning "frontier pass" and 根 (ne) meaning "root, foundation".
Truumeel Estonian
Truumeel is an Estonian surname meaning "loyal/faithful minded".
Drucker German, Dutch, Jewish
Occupational name for an operator of a printing press, derived from German drucken "to print".
Isori Japanese (Rare)
Variant reading of Japanese Kanji 五十里 (see Ikari 2).
Yorulmaz Turkish
Means "tireless, unfailing" in Turkish.
Bandaranayaka Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala බණ්ඩාරනායක (see Bandaranayake).
Ben Moshe Hebrew
Means "son of Moshe" in Hebrew.
Lew Chinese (Cantonese)
Cantonese romanization of Liu.
Kitt English, German
English: From the Middle English personal name Kit, a pet form of Christopher... [more]
Xūwáng Chinese
A Chinese surname taken from combining 須 (xū) meaning "must, necessary" with 王 (wáng) meaning "king, monarch". It is the Chinese reading of the Japanese surname Suō.
Ker Scottish
Variant of Kerr.
Pogonatos Greek
Means bearded in medieval Greek.
Gobara Arabic (Egyptian, Anglicized), Arabic
In Egypt and Sudan the surname Jabbar is pronounced with a ‘G’ sound in English. It is also feminine form hence the additional ‘A’ at the end of the name.
Weinberg German, Jewish
Weinberg means "Vineyard" in german.
Maloret French
This surname comes from the French and means 'unfortunate' or 'luckless'.
Wassink Dutch
Derived from the personal name Wazo and the suffix -ink denoting origin from a family or place.
Roybal Galician (Hispanicized)
Castellanized form of Ruibal.
Garrighan Irish
to denote 'son of Geargain' a name which originally in derived from 'gearg' which meant grouse but which was often used figuratively for warrior
Sakhno Ukrainian
From any Ukrainian village called Sakhno (Сахно), the name itself of unknown origin.
Viimne Estonian
Viimne is an Estonian surname meaning "the very last" and "the last of".
Boccafusca Italian
Possibly means "dark mouth", from bocco "mouth" and fosco "dark, gloomy", a nickname for someone who often spoke ill of others, or perhaps given to foundlings.
Nett Irish
Variant of McNett.
Klaassen Dutch
Means "son of Klaas".
Mollica Italian
Means "crumb, breadcrumb; soft inner part of bread" in Italian, a nickname for a physically small or unintelligent person, or perhaps someone considered kind and soft-hearted.
Lukanov Bulgarian
Means "son of Lukan".
Akitani Japanese
Aki can means "bright" or "autumn" and tani means "valley".
Ryabov m Russian
Derived from Russian рябой (ryaboy) meaning "pockmarked".
Speicher German
occupational name for someone in charge of a granary. From middle high German spicher meaning "grain store".
Bergen German, Dutch, Flemish, Jewish
Originally denoted a person from any of the various places named Bergen in Germany and the Netherlands. It is also a variant of Berg. Famous bearers include the Americans Candice Bergen (1946-), an actress, and Polly Bergen (1930-2014), an actress, singer and television host.
Harmer English (British)
Meaning, of the Army or man of Armor, from the battle at Normandy, France. It was formerly a French last name Haremere after the battle at Normandy it moved on to England where it was shortened to Harmer.
Lubbers Dutch
Patronymic from the given name Lubbert.
Frankhauser German
Denotes somebody from any of several places with the name Frankenhausen.
Kirkby English
Variant of Kirby.
Arystanbekova f Kazakh
Feminine form of Arystanbekov.
Donskikh Russian
Derived from the name of the Don river, derived from an Aryan root meaning "river".
Illopmägi Estonian
Illopmägi is an Estonian surname possibly derived from "iisop" meaning "hyssop", or "ilus" meaning "beautiful", and "mägi" meaning "mountain/hill".
Rohulaid Estonian
Estonian surname meaning "grassland islet".
Farivar Persian
From the given name Farivar.
Galpin English
English: occupational name for a messenger or scullion (in a monastery), from Old French galopin ‘page’, ‘turnspit’, from galoper ‘to gallop’.
Garufi Italian
Meaning uncertain, possibly related to the Germanic given name Garulf, or to Arabic qaruf "hard, cruel".
Huckaby English
Means "person from Huccaby", Devon (perhaps "crooked river-bend"), or "person from Uckerby", Yorkshire ("Úkyrri's or Útkári's farmstead").
Khaimov Uzbek, Jewish
Means "son of Chayyim". This surname is used by Bukharan Jews of Uzbekistan.
Rabinowitz Jewish
Germanized variant of Rabinovich.
Makin English
Nickname derived from Middle English maide "girl, young woman" and the diminutive suffix -kin.
Odtojan Filipino, Cebuano
From Cebuano udtohan meaning "noon, zenith".
Kuriyama Japanese
From Japanese 栗 (kuri) meaning "chestnut" and 山 (yama) meaning "mountain".
Mogren Swedish
Combination of Swedish mo "sandy heath" and gren "branch".
Frans Dutch, Flemish
From the given name Frans.
Ivandija Croatian
Derived from the forename Ivan.
Kocabıyık Turkish
From Turkish koca "large" and bıyık "moustache".
Snidro Italian (Swiss)
Swiss Italian borrowing of Schneider.
Greenstein Jewish
From German, means "Green Stone".
Straka Czech, Slovak
Czech and Slovak: Nickname from straka ‘magpie’, probably for a thievish or insolent person.... [more]
Khusanov m Uzbek, Kyrgyz
Patronymic from the personal name Khusan and the suffix -ov.
Eisenstein German, Jewish
topographic name for someone who lived by a place where iron ore was extracted or perhaps a habitational name from a place called for its iron works. Jewish artificial compound of German isarn "iron" and stein "stone".
Malekpour Persian
Means "son of Malek" in Persian.
Alver Estonian
Alver is an Estonian surname, possibly derived from "allvee" meaning "underwater".
Kaut German
Topographic name from the Franconian dialect word Kaut(e) "hollow", "pit", "den".
Iwao Japanese
Iwa means "stone" and o means "tail".
Kassem Arabic
From the given name Kassem, a form of Qasim.
Eyyubov Azerbaijani
Means "son of Eyyub".
Jekal Korean
Diffrent romanization of Chegal.
Pross German
Variant of "Prosser"
Radi Arabic
Derived from the given name Radi.
Pootsmann Estonian
Possibly an altered form of German Bootsmann, an occupational name meaning "boatswain, bosun". Compare Frisian Bootsma.
Hornæus Swedish (Archaic)
Probably a latinization of Härnösand, a city in Västernorrland County, Sweden. A notable bearer was Swedish priest Laurentius (Lars) Christophori Hornæus (born as Lars Christoffersson in 1645 in Härnösand)... [more]
Fifer German, American, Slovene
Americanized and Slovenian spelling of German Pfeiffer.
Hummer German, English
Hummer is the German word for 'Lobster' in English. It is also the name of a vehicle- the 'Hummer'!
Dara Khmer
It means star.
Dolce Italian, Sicilian
From the medieval name Dolce meaning "sweet, pleasant" derived from Latin dulcis.
Syme English
Variant of Symes, from a form of the given name Simon 1 (see Simms).