Galperina is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Rakovsky is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Litvinov or Litvinoff is a Russian surname derived from the term Litvin, meaning Lithuanian person (Litva/Литвa). The female form of this surname is Litvinova.
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".
Abramov (male) and Abramova (female) are old Russian surnames originating around the 16th century. Variations of the former calendar name Avraam. The surname was common among all social estates and covered the whole territory of the Russian Empire. Sometimes it derived from patronymic. It was also adopted by Jews following the Partitions of Poland and usually meant "the son of Abram". As it is not allowed to share the same name as a living father, a son whose father was named Abraham would be called Abram as a stand-in for Abraham.
Kurochkin is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Kurochkina. It may refer to
Halperin is a variation of the Jewish surname Heilprin. Both forms are Southern Yiddish for Heilbrun, that is the German city Heilbronn. The name is sometimes transliterated into the Cyrillic alphabet as Galperin. In Russia the pronunciation of an 'h' was difficult and pronounced as 'g'.
Muravyov, or Muravyova, also transliterated as Muraviev, Muravyev or Murav'ev, is a common Russian last name. It may refer to:
Morozov (masculine) or Morozova (Моро́зова) (feminine) is a common Russian surname. The alternative spellings are Morosov,Morosoff, Morosow, Morozow, Morozoff,Marozau and Marozaŭ. The surname is derived from the Russian word moroz (frost). The following people share this surname:
Bocharov and Bocharova are respectively male and female Slavic occupational surnames derived from Bochar (бочар) which means cooper.
Zlatarić is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Berzin is a Russified form of the Latvian language surname Bērziņš. Individuals with the surname include:
Ivanenko is a Ukrainian surname. It may refer to:
Volchkov, feminine: Volchkova is a Russian surname. The origin comes from "волк", wolf. A transliteration variant is Voltchkov.
Venclova is a Lithuanian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Yeliseyev or Eliseev is a Russian surname, there are two different transliterations. Notable people with the surname include:
Dyakonov, Diakonoff, Diakonov, or Diakonof is a Russian surname meaning "a deacon's". Notable people with the surname include:
Galperin is an (Eastern) Jewish surname, derived from Heilprin / Halperin. Notable people with the surname include:
Gelperin is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Kühner, also spelled Kuehner, and sometimes anglicised as Kuhner, is a German surname.
Revekka Menasievna Galperina was a Soviet editor and translator of English and German literature, one of the most prolific translators in the Soviet Union.