Ok (Turkish: Arrow) is a Turkish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Haydar, also spelt Hajdar, Hayder, Heidar, Haider, Heydar, and other variants, is an Arabic male given name, also used as a surname, meaning "lion".
Okay is a term of approval, assent, or acknowledgment.
Jeon (전), also often spelled Jun, Chun or Chon, is a common Korean family name. As of the South Korean census of 2000, there were 687,867 people with this name in South Korea. It can be written with three different hanja, each with different meanings and indicating different lineages.
Çelik, meaning "steel" in Turkish, is a Turkish given name and surname. It may refer to:
Terzi is a surname. People with this surname include:
Fikri also spelled Fekri, is a masculine given Arabic name or surname in the possessive form, which generally means "thoughtful" but also could bear the meaning "intellectually, mentally, spiritual". It may refer to:
Kurtoğlu is a Turkish name. In old times it was a patronymic lakap (epithet) meaning "son of Kurt", from the Turkish first name "Kurt". The latter name literally means "wolf" in Turkish. In modern times the epithet has become a surname. Notable people with this epithet or surname include:
Akarsu is a Turkish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Demirci is a Turkish surname meaning "blacksmith". Notable people with the surname include:
Köse is a Turkish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Altın is a Turkish word meaning "golden". It is also a common surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Terzioğlu is a Turkish surname. It is an occupational surname of patronymic derivation: Terzi (tailor) + -oğlu
Ademović is a predominantly Bosniak surname, derived from the Turkish Adem, which is both a personal name ("Adam") and a word meaning "man". Notable people with the surname include:
Kılıç is a Turkish surname meaning "sword". Notable people with the surname include:
Kurt or Kurd is a Turkish name and surname literally meaning "wolf".
Özdilek is a Turkish surname formed by the combination of the two Turkish words öz and dilek and may refer to:
Pehlivan or Pahlevan derives from Iranian language word meaning noble, wrestler, hero or champion and it is a loan word in many Asiatic languages as well as middle eastern languages including Turkish surname originally given to wrestlers. The name of Feyli (Pehli) Kurds is also deriving from the same root word. The word consist of two Iranic (Aryen) word "pehli" or "pahli" and "van, wan". While peh, pah is root word for hero "van" or "wan" is a suffix similar as in "er, or" in soldier, warrior, wrestler, shopper.
İbrahimoğlu or Ibrahimoghlu is a Turkish and Azerbaijani surname. Its literal meaning of "descendant of Ibrahim" is similar to that of the Bosnian surname Ibrahimović and the Albanian family name Brahimaj and it strongly indicates Muslim religious affiliation of its bearer. People with the name include:
Tilki is a Turkish language surname from a nickname meaning "fox" in Turkish. Notable people with the name include:
Kasap is a surname, a Turkish-language variant of Qasab. Notable people with the surname include: