Shternberg is a surname, a variant of Sternberg, either a Yiddish spelling or a transliteration from Russian. Notable people with this surname include:
Rokhlin is a Slavic language-influenced Jewish surname of matronymic derivation. It literally means "Rokhl's", where "Rokhl" is a transcription of Rochl, a Yiddish form of the name Rachel. Variants include Rohlin, Rochlin and Rochline. The feminine form in Slavic cultures is Rokhlina / Rochlina.
Yankev Shternberg was a Yiddish theater director, teacher of theater, playwright, avant-garde poet and short-story writer, best known for his theater work in Romania between the two world wars.
Sternberg is surname of:
Joffe is a Hebrew-language surname, a variant of Jaffe. Notable people with this surname include:
Barenboim is a Yiddish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bronstein is the surname of:
Shifrin, Shiffrin and Schifrin is a matronymic Jewish surname of Yiddish origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Abramowicz, Abramovich, Abramowitz, and Abramovitz are variant spellings of a name meaning "son of Abraham" among Slavic language speaking peoples; it is a common surname amongst Ashkenazi Jews, for whom it is commonly Hebraized to Ben-Avraham (בן-אברהם) upon immigration to Israel. It was also one of the many surnames of which were historically given by the returning Crusaders to their children, in recognition of their father's visit to the Middle East.
Zilber is a surname and a variation of Silber. Notable people with the surname include:
Gurvich, Gurovich, Gurwich, Gurwitch, Gurwitsch or Gurevich is a Yiddish surname, a Russian form of the surname "Horowitz" (Гу́рвич), see the latter article about its etymology.
Lunts is a Yiddish surname, a variant of Luntz. Notable people with the surname include:
Vainshtein is a German and Yiddish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Kulik is a Slavic surname also present in Yiddish and German. The Ukrainian form is Kulyk. The Czech-language form, Kulík, is a diminutive of "Mikuláš" ("Nicholas") via "Mikulík". The Russian is both "Kulik" and "Kullik". In English it has at times been transliterated as Kulick.
Eichenwald is a surname, which literally means "oak forest" in German and Yiddish languages. In Russian language, the surname is rendered as "Айхенва́льд", which may by transliterated into English as Aikhenvald or Aykhenvald.
Kravets is a Ukrainian-language and Yiddish-language occupational surname meaning "tailor".
Łazowert (archaic feminine: Łazowertówna, Łazowertówa is a Polish-language Yiddish surname. Other variants of the surname include Lasowert and Lazovert. Notable people with this surname include:
Mikhlin, Mihlin or Michlin is a Russian Jewish surname. It is patronymic surname derived from the given name Michl, a Yiddish version of the name Michael. Notable people with this surname include:
Mayzel is a Jewish surname. Notable people, with the surname include:
Teyf, Teif, sometimes Taif, Tayf, is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Barsht is a Yiddish surname literally meaning "borscht". Notable people with the surname include: