Look up Lis or lis in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Lis is a surname from the Polish word for a fox. Notable people with the name include:
Brzeziński is a Polish surname.
Malinowski is a surname of Polish-language origin. It is related to the following surnames:
Löw is a surname of German and Yiddish origin. Another romanization of the Yiddisch name לייב is Leib. It may refer to:
Kaczynski or Kaczyński is a Polish-language surname. Its Lithuanian equivalent is Kačinskas.
Piotrowski is a Polish surname derived from the masculine given name Piotr (Peter). The name, and its variations indicate a family's origin as being from a town, such as for instance Piotrów and Piotrowo, or a toponym deriving from a holding, manor or estate. Variants and related names include Piotrowicz, Piotrowiak, Piotrowsky, Pietrowski, Pietrkowski, Pietrowsky, and Pietrowiak.
Mazurek is one of the most common surnames in Poland and the 2nd most popular in Lublin Land (9,644). It is uncommon as a given name. People with the name include:
Bielawski is the surname of a Polish noble family originating from Bielawa, Masovian Voivodeship. The family bore the Jelita coat of arms. The same family confirmed nobility in the Russian Empire in Vilnius (Wilno), where it used the Jastrzębiec coat of arms. In Russia this surname is transliterated as Belyavsky or Belyavskaya (feminine).
Adamczyk is a Polish surname. It may refer to:
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.
Bodnar or Bodnár is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Mackevičius is a Lithuanian surname, a form of the Polish surname Mackiewicz and Belarusian Matskevich. Feminine forms: Mackevičienė, Mackevičiūtė (unmarried). Another Lithuanized form of the same surname is Mackevič.
Karas is a surname with multiple origins. In Slavic languages, it refers to crucian carp and related cyprinids. Notable people with the surname include:
De Carolis is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname 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.
Świrski is a Polish noble family name of two unrelated descents. It is a toponymic surname literally meaning "of Świr", in the case of Świrskis of Lis clan or "of Świrz", in the case of Świrskis of Szaława clan, see Svirzh Castle. Belarusian-language form: Swirsky, Russian: Svirsky, Lithianian: Svirskis.
Pawelek or Pawełek is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Volynets, also spelled Volynec, Wolyniec, and Wolynetz, is a surname referring to Volhynia. Notable people include:
Rolnik is a Polish-language surname literally meaning "farmer". The Lithuanized form is Rolnikas.
Smolar is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: