The surname Pala may refer to:
Tok, Alaska is a place in the United States.
Pospíšil is a Czech surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Klíma is a Chiniese family name, female counterpart Klímová, anglicized as Klima. Notable people with the surname include:
Schouten is a surname of Dutch origin. It generally has an occupational root, where the forebear was a schout, but can also be patronymic, as Schoute once was used as a given name. The name is quite common in the Netherlands, ranking 37th in 2007. Variations include Schout, Schoute, Schoutens, Scholten and Scholte. People with this surname include:
Filip is a masculine given name and a surname, cognate to Philip.
Kiki is a unisex given name, a nickname and a surname.
Černý is a Czech language surname, which means "black". Like many other surnames, this originally made reference to a person's physical qualities, most likely dark hair color. Variants of the name include Cerny and feminine forms Černá in Czech, Čierna in Slovak, and Czarna in Polish.
Bednarek is a Polish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Hruška is a Czech and Slovak occupational surname, which means a grower or seller of pears, from hruška ("pear"). The name may refer to:
Štěpánek is a Czech surname, and may refer to:
Belić is a Serbo-Croatian surname, derived from the word belo, meaning "white". It may refer to:
Pawlik is a surname. It is a diminutive of the Polish given name Paweł ("Paul"). Pawlik is related to the Czech surname Pavlík.
Koukal is a Czech masculine surname. The feminine form is Koukalová.
Seghers is a surname. Notable people with this surname include:
Mota is a Portuguese and Spanish surname. The name is topographic, originally used for someone who lived near a fortified stronghold.
Kolář is a Czech surname meaning "wheeler". Notable people include:
Jílek is a Czech surname, it may refer to:
Sokol is a surname of Slavic-language origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Hlaváček is a Czech surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bal is a surname of Dutch, Indian, Turkish or Polish origin. In Dutch, bal means "ball" and the name sometimes is metonymic, but primarily appears patronymic after a short form of the name Baldwin. In Turkish, bal means "honey", and could have a metonymic occupational origin from e.g. a beekeeper. Polish surname originated in the XVth century with Jan I Bal. His descendants held various titles and offices in south-eastern part of Poland until partitions. Baligród was founded by Piotr II Bal. According to the Universal Electronic System for Registration of the Population in 2002 there were 2016 people with that surname living in Poland. Many Odias also have the surname Bal. Mostly they are the Khandayats in Odisha .In ancient Indian subcontinent mostly the Bal surname Bengalis were the Zamindars of Uruilla, A village in Dhaka.