Jezierski (feminine Jezierska) is a Polish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Lewandowski is a Polish-language surname. In other languages it may be transliterated as Lewandowsky, Levandovski, Levandovsky, Levandovskyy, Levandoski, Levandovskiy.
Szymański is the ninth most common surname in Poland with about 114 075 people sharing it by 2015.
Kaczynski or Kaczyński is a Polish-language surname. Its Lithuanian equivalent is Kačinskas.
Kohut, Kogut, or Kohout is a surname of Slavic-language origin, meaning rooster. Notable people with the surname include:
Bittner is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Andrzejewski is a Polish surname derived from the given name Andrew. In the early 1990s there were 26,917 people in Poland with the name. Notable people with this name include:
Adamczyk is a Polish surname. It may refer to:
Pawłowski is a Polish surname derived from the given name Paweł. In some cases, it is a noble surname derived from villages named Pawłowo. It is ranked about 20th in the list of the most common Polish surnames, with more than 50,000 carriers. It is popular especially in the mid-northern part of the country.
Jakubowski, Yakubovsky, Yakubovskiy, Yakubovskii or Iakubovskii is a Slavic masculine surname of Polish origin. Its feminine counterpart is Jakubowska, Yakubovskaya or Iakubovskaia. It is a toponymic surname derived from any of the places named Jakubowo, Jakubów, Jakubowice and literally meaning "of Jakubowo", etc. The places themselves mean "belonging to Jakub".
Krawiec is a Polish surname meaning "tailor". Males and females use the same form in modern Poland. The surname is related to Kravets, Kravec, and Kravitz.
Musiał or Musial is a Polish surname meaning "he had to", from the past tense of the Polish word musiec. An equivalent surname in Czech is Musil. Notable people with this surname include:
Rybak, sometimes written Ribak or Ryback) is a name and a surname meaning "fisherman" in Belarusian, Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian. It may refer to:
Danielewski is a Polish-language surname derived from the given name Daniel. Notable people with this surname include:
Szulc is a Polish surname, a version of the German surname Schulz. Notable people with the surname include:
Dawidowicz is a surname of Polish-language origin, meaning "son of David". The Russian and Belarusian form is Davidovich, Ukrainian: Davydovych.
Szwarc is a Polonized-Yiddish version of the German surname Schwartz.
Biały is Polish for "white". The word is a Polish surname, as well as a nickname of several Polish monarchs and noblemen. It may refer to:
Lis is a surname from the Polish word for a fox. Notable people with the name include:
Szmidt and Szmit are Polish-language transliterations of the German surname Schmidt. They may refer to:
Warszawski, feminine: Warszawska is a Polish-language toponymic surname literally meaning "of/from Warsaw". It may by transliterated as Warshavsky / Warshavska, etc.