The surname Benenson may refer to:
Pevsner or Pevzner is a Jewish surname, and may refer to:
Slonimsky is an Ashkenazi Jewish surname popular among people of Belarusian, Polish and Russian people of Jewish origin. It means "a person from the city of Slonim".
Kaminski or Kamiński is a surname of Polish origin. It is the sixth most common surname in Poland.
Towne, an archaic spelling of the word town, is a surname, and may refer to:
The name Portnoy, sometimes spelled Portnoi, is a Jewish surname of Russian origin. The Russian word 'портной' translates as 'tailor'. The name may refer to:
Halpert is a Norman French surname which varied from the French surname Halbert, and ultimately derives from the Germanic masculine name Adelbert. It may refer to:
Rabin is a Hebrew surname. It originates from the Hebrew word rav meaning Rabbi, or from the name of the specific Rabbi Abin. The most well known bearer of the name was Yitzhak Rabin, prime minister of Israel and Nobel Peace prize Laureate.
Litvinenko is a gender-neutral Slavic surname. It may refer to
Gascoigne is a British surname of Old French origin, the regional name of Gascony. The surname first appears on record in England in the early 13th century. Gascoigne or Gascoine may refer to:
Blank is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
McNee or Macnee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bondarchuk is a Ukrainian surname meaning barrel maker. Most famous are the members of the Bondarchuk family who have been influential in Soviet cinema. The surname may refer to:
Belsky is a Russian surname. When transliterated as Bielski it can also refer to a Polish family of the same name.
Kneale is a surname of Manx origin. The name is an Anglicisation of the Gaelic Mac Néill, meaning "son of Niall".
Pavlenko is a patronymic surname of Ukrainian origin. The surname is a derivative of the given name Pavlo.
Danilowicz is a Polish-language surname of, among others, a noble family of Rutheninan origin and Jews with roots in Danilavičy, Belarus and other place names which include "Daniłowicz" in their names. Its archaic feminine forms are Daniłowiczówna (unmarried) and Daniłowiczówa (married).
Maycock is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Covali is the Romanian form of the name Kowal, meaning "forger" or "blacksmith" in Slavic languages. The surname may refer to:
Groisman, Groysman are the Yiddish-language variants of the surname Grossman, variant transliterations of the Cyrillic spelling Гро́йсман, which comes from the pale of settlement in the region of Bessarabia of the Russian Empire. Notable people with the surname include:
Lelchuk, Russian: Лельчук is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: