Roeder

Last updated

Roeder is a surname of German origin. Notable people with this surname include:

See also

Related Research Articles

Ackermann is a surname. "Acker" comes from German or Old English, meaning "field", and is related to the word "acre". Ackermann means "farmer". Notable people with the surname, also spelled Akkermann. include:

Freudenthal is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:

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

Sommer is a surname, from the German, Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian languages word for the season "summer".

Funke is a family name of German origin. Funke means "spark" and refers to the work of a smith. People with this surname include:

Schaefer is an alternative spelling and cognate for the German word schäfer, meaning 'shepherd', which itself descends from the Old High German scāphare. Variants "Shaefer", "Schäfer", the additional alternative spelling "Schäffer", and the anglicised forms "Schaeffer", "Schaffer", "Shaffer", "Shafer", and "Schafer" are all common surnames.

Becker is one of the German-language surnames, along with Bäcker and Baecker, that derive from the [baːk]~[bɛk] root, which refers to baking. The surname began as a name for a baker. In northern Germany it can also derive from the word Beck for Bach to denote origin.

Simson is a surname, also a given name, and may refer to:

Baer or Van Baer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

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

Adamson is an English patronymic surname meaning "son of Adam". It is rare as a given name, although there has been a tradition in some families for the first-born son to be called Adam. People with the surname Adamson include:

Marx is a Germanised form of the Jewish family name Mordechai. It is also possibly derived from Marcus.

Massie is a surname sometimes derived from the Scottish clan name Matheson, and may refer to:

Stern is a surname which can be of either German/Yiddish or English language origin, though the former case predominates.

Frank is a German surname. Notable persons with the surname include:

George is a surname of Irish, English, Welsh, South Indian Christian, Middle Eastern Christian, French, or Native American origin. The German form is Georg. Notable people with the surname include:

Fuchs is a surname; it has as variants Fux, Fuhs and Fuchß. Notable persons bearing it include the following:

Abraham is a surname. It can be of Jewish, English, French, German, Dutch, Irish, Welsh, Cornish, Breton, Lebanese, Syrian and other origins. It is derived from the Hebrew personal name Avraham, borne by the biblical patriarch Abraham, revered by Jews as a founding father of the Jewish people, and by Muslims as founder of all Semitic peoples. The name is explained in Genesis 17:5 as being derived from the Hebrew av hamon goyim "father of a multitude of nations". It was commonly used as a given name among Christians in the Middle Ages, and has always been a popular Jewish given name. The English name Abram is often a short form of Abraham, but it can also be a shortened version of Adburgham, which comes from a place name. As an Irish name, it was adopted as an approximation of the Gaelic name Mac an Bhreitheamhan "son of the judge". The German name Brahm is often a short form of Abraham, but it can also be a topographic name signifying someone who lived near a bramble thicket. The name Braham has been used as an Anglicization of both Abraham and its patronymic Abrahams by Ashkenazi Jews in the British Isles. Abraham has also been used as an Anglicization of the equivalent Arabic surname Ibrāhīm.

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

Schumann is a German occupational surname. Notable people with the name, in English often Schuman, include: