Bronstein is a Yiddish surname. People include:
The Jewish name Peretz may refer to the following people:
Rubinstein is a surname of German and Yiddish origin, mostly found among Ashkenazi Jews; it denotes "ruby-stone". Notable persons named Rubinstein include:
Joffe is a Hebrew-language surname, a variant of Jaffe. Notable people with this surname include:
Kogan is a Russian spelling variant of the Jewish surname Cohen.
Rabinovich or Rabinovitch, is a Russian Ashkenazi Jewish surname, Slavic for "son of the rabbi". The Polish/Lithuanian equivalents are Rabinowitz or Rabinowicz.
Zeitlin is a matronymic Jewish surname. It is derived from the female name Zeitl according to the rules of Slavic languages, with the possessive suffix '-in' and literally means "Zeitl's".
Volkov, or Volkova, is a common Russian surname. It is derived from the word волк.
Sedov or Sedova is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Shifrin, Shiffrin, Schifrin and Schiffrin is a matronymic Jewish surname of Yiddish origin. Shifrin derives from the Yiddish female personal שפרה shifre (Shifre), from Hebrew שִׁפְרָה šīp̄ərā, shifrá (Shifra) 'beauty, grace'. It is formed with the Slavic possessive suffix -in. Notable people with the surname include:
Greenfeld is a surname, which may refer to:
Gelfand is a surname meaning "elephant" in the Yiddish language, and may refer to:
Garfinkel is a Yiddish surname with variants Garfinkle, Garfinckel, Gurfinkel, Gorfinkel, Garfield etc. Notable people with the surname include:
Zilber is a surname and a variation of Silber. Notable people with the surname include:
Gurvich, Gurovich, Gurwich, Gurwitch, Gurwitsch or Gurevich is a Yiddish surname, a Russian form of the surname "Horowitz" (Гу́рвич), see the latter article about its etymology.
Leib is a given name, and a surname usually of Jewish origin. Leib often stems from לייב (leib), the Yiddish word for Hebrew "heart" לב and with the diminutives Leibel and Leibele, or from the Yiddish word for "lion". The Standard German word for lion is Löwe; other – partly dialectal – German forms of the word are Löw, Loew, Löb, Leb and Leib.
Kushnir kushashvili(ქუშაშვილი) is a Ukrainian and Jewish surname, meaning furrier.
Vainshtein is a German and Yiddish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
The surname Trotsky, Trotskiy, or Trotski Russian: Троцкий is a toponymic surname derived from the Polish name Troki of the Lithuanian city of Trakai, literally meaning "of Troki" or "from Troki". It may be either the Russified form of the Polish noble name Trocki or a Jewish toponymic surname.
The name Lev is a first name, or less commonly a surname. It may be of different origins.
The history of the Jews in Chișinău dates to the early 1700s, when Chișinău was located first in Moldavia and later from 1812 onwards in the Bessarabia region of the Russian Empire. Chișinău is now the capital city of Moldova and is the center of the country's Jewish population. As of 2022, around 10,000 of the 15,000 Moldovan Jews reside in Chișinău.