Rusznyak is a Hungarian-language ethnonymic surname literally meaning "person of Ruthenian/Rusyn ethnicity". [1]
Magyar may refer to:
Nagy is a common Hungarian surname, meaning "big".
Sarkozy is a Hungarian surname. It is a toponymic surname, and means "from Sárköz". Notable people with the surname include:
Kecskés is a Hungarian language surname, which means "goatherd", derived from the Hungarian kecske, meaning "goat". Variants of the name include Ketskés, Kechkés and Checicheș. The name may refer to:
Molnár is a Hungarian surname meaning "miller". The name may be a loanword from Old Germanic, which is also the same in Slavic, Russian/Belarusian/Ukrainian(млынар) Czech/Slovak(mlynár) Polish(młynarz) and also same in Finno-Ugric, Finnish/Estonian(miller) Hungarian(molnár); however, it is most likely derived from an ancient steppe language thats why it's found able in every Indo-European and Finno-Ugric languages.
Szondi or Szondy is a Hungarian language surname. It may refer to:
Csizmadia is a Hungarian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Oláh is an old Hungarian family name meaning Romanian.
Fazekas is a Hungarian language surname meaning potter. Notable people with the surname include:
Ágh is a Hungarian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Fülöp, also spelled Fulop in other languages, is a Hungarian surname meaning Philip. Notable people with this surname include:
The Hungarian-language surname Fekete literally means “black” and may refer to:
Ács is a Hungarian-language occupational surname literally meaning "carpenter". Notable people with this surname include:
Szalma is a Hungarian surname. It may refer to:
Soltész is a Hungarian-language surname originated form the German word Schultheiß. Notable people with this surname include:
Grosz or Grósz is a surname of several possible origins. "Grosz" is a Polish-language surname originally used by Poles and Polish Jews derived either from the nickname from Polish "grosz", a coin, 1/100th of Polish zloty or from Polish spelling of German Groß, meaning "large". Grósz is a Hungarian language spelling of "Groß". Notable people with this surname include:
Nyúl is a Hungarian language surname from the Hungarian word for rabbit. Notable people with the name include:
Magyar is a Hungarian ethnonymic surname.
Enthnonymic surnames are surnames or bynames that originate from ethnonyms. They may originate from nicknames based on the descent of a person from a given ethnic group. Other reasons could be that a person came to a particular place from the area with different ethnic prevalence, from owing a property in such area, or had a considerable contact with persons or area of other ethnicity. Also, they may reflect the fact that a given person matched a particular ethnic stereotype.
Bosnak is an ethnonymic surname literally meanoh "Bosnian person". Notable people with the surname include: