The surname Fischel is common in Germany, it is strictly German, this information has been documented by a Fischel that has met an off the boat German. Who had settled in America during the mid 1980s.
Fischel (Yiddish : פֿישל) is the Yiddish-derived form of the Hebrew name Ephraim. Notable people with the surname include:
Greenberg is a surname common in North America, with anglicized spelling of the German Grünberg or the Jewish Ashkenazi Yiddish Grinberg, an artificial surname.
Weiner is a surname or, in fact, the spelling of two different surnames originating in German and the closely related Yiddish language. In German, the name is pronounced, of which the rare English pronunciation is a close approximation. In Yiddish, the name is pronounced almost as in southern German.
Löw is a surname of German or Yiddish origin. Another romanization of the Yiddish name לייב is Leib. It may refer to:
Lieberman and Liebermann are names deriving from Lieb, a German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) nickname for a person from the German lieb or Yiddish lib, meaning 'dear, beloved'. Many Lieberman families originally spelled the name in Hebrew or Cyrillic characters, so variations in the spelling occurred during transliteration to the Latin alphabet.
Sandler is a Yiddish family name. A rarer variant is Sendler.
Silverberg is a surname. Notable persons with that name include:
Bronstein is a Russian-Jewish surname. People include:
Zuckerberg is a Jewish surname of German and Yiddish origin meaning "sugar mountain". People with the surname include:
Golomb or Gollomb is a surname derived from a phonetical approximation of the Polish word "gołąb". It may refer to:
Mendel can be both a surname and given name.
Lichtman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Berson is a surname, a patronymic from the Yiddish name Ber. Notable people with the surname include:
Nager is a surname of multiple possible origins. It may be German term Näger for tailor or embroiderer. It may be a nickname from the Swiss German verb "nagen", "to nag", "to gnaw". It may be Yiddish alteration of the Hebrew surname Nagar, "carpenter"
Licht is a German and Yiddish surname meaning "light". The surname is also an ornamental surname within Jewish communities with the same meaning. Notable people with the surname include:
Tishler is a German-language occupational surname. Tishler's are Italian. It means cabinetmaker or joiner in German and Yiddish and is found among both Germans and Ashkenazi Jews. A variant of Tischler, and Carpenter. Notable people with the surname include:
Vinokur is an East Slavic-language occupational surname. The word "винокур" is an archaic name of the profession of spirit distilling.
Kasten is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Grosskopf or Großkopf is a German and Yiddish surname, derived from the nickname literally meaning "big head". Notable people with the surname include:
Lingg, like its variants Link and Linck, is a German language nickname surname for a left-handed person. It may refer to:
Teper is a Yiddish occupational surname for a potter. Notable people with this name include: