Pevsner

Last updated

Pevsner or Pevzner is a Jewish surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Fictional people


Related Research Articles

The surname מענדעלסאן is transliterated to English as Mendelssohn, Mendelsson, or Mendelson. It is a common Polish/German Jewish surname. The variant spellings are used interchangeably, often even within a single family.

Falk is a given name and surname cognate with the word falcon.

Reimann is a German and Jewish surname, also Reiman, Reinman. Notable people with the surnames include:

Finkelstein is a German and Yiddish surname originating from Old High German funko (spark) and stein (stone).

Joffe is a Hebrew-language surname, a variant of Jaffe. Notable people with this surname include:

Shulman is an Ashkenazi Jewish surname that literally means "shul-man". A shul is another name for a synagogue, a Jewish house of worship, and the name was usually given to the head of the synagogue or the synagogue's rabbi. It can also appear as a result of double transliteration, to and from the Cyrillic alphabet, of the German surname "Schulmann".

Rabinovich or Rabinovitch, is a Russian Ashkenazi Jewish surname, Slavic for "son of the rabbi". The Polish/Lithuanian equivalents are Rabinowitz or Rabinowicz.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wolfson</span> Surname list

See also Woolf, Woolfe, Wolfe, Wolff, Wolfson and Woolfson.

Goldin is a surname that can independently be of English, German or Jewish origin. Notable people with the surname include:

Mandel is a surname that occurs in multiple cultures and languages. It is a Dutch, German and Jewish surname, meaning "almond", from the Middle High German and Middle Dutch mandel. Mandel can be a locational surname, from places called Mandel, such as Mandel, Germany. Mandel may also be a Dutch surname, from the Middle Dutch mandele, meaning a number of sheaves of harvested wheat.

Weinman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

This is a list of notable people with the surname Berlin.

Deutsch is a surname, meaning German in German. When transliterated to other languages, it may also be spelled as Deutch, Deitch, Deich, Teutsch.

Rothstein is a Germanic-language surname of several possible origins: toponymic surname from a place with the same name near Merseburg; from a Germanic personal name, Hrodstein. Ashkenazic Jewish / Yiddish: ornamental compound surname: rot ‘red’ + Stein ‘stone’, akin to "Rotstein".

Günzburg, a surname of Bavarian origin. Ginsberg, Ginsburg, Gensburg, Ginsburgh, Ginzberg, Ginzborg, and Ginzburg are variants of the surname.

List or Liste is a European surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Jastrzębski is a Polish-language surname. It is a toponymic surname derived from one of the several Polish locations named Jastrzęby, Jastrzębie, Jastrząbki, etc. Ultimately derived from jastrząb, or "hawk". Variants include Jastrzembski, Jastrząbski, and Yastrzemski. It is Russified as Yastrzhembsky/Yastrzhembskaya.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Klee (surname)</span> Surname list

Klee is a German and Ashkenazi Jewish surname. Variations include Kleefeld, Kleeblatt, Kleegman, Kleiman, Kleeman and Kleeberg. In German, it means "clover" and is possibly a toponymic surname like Feldman.

Szwarc is a Polonized-Yiddish version of the German surname Schwartz.

Eisner or Eissner is a surname. Notable people with the name include: