Sokoloff, a surname, may refer to:
Feltsman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Vinogradov or Vinogradoff is a common Russian last name derived from the Russian word виноград. Vinogradova is a feminine version of the same name. Notable people with the surname include:
Stepanov (Степанов), female Stepanova is a common Russian and Serbian surname that is derived from the male given name Stepan and literally means Stepan's. The Latvianized form is Stepanovs. Notable people with the surname include:
Sokołów may refer to the following places in Poland:
As a surname, Sokolow may refer to:
Sokolov (masculine) or Sokolova (feminine) may refer to:
Zuyev, sometimes spelled as Zuev, or Zuyeva, is a Russian surname derived from the word зуй (zooy). Notable people with the surname include:
Belov, or Belova, is a common Russian surname, derived from the word Bely. Notable people with the surname include:
Istomin may refer to:
Avdeyev or Avdeyeva is a common Russian last name that is derived from the male given name Avdey and literally means Avdey's.
Yampolsky, Yampolsky, Yampolskiy is a toponymic surname common among Ukrainian Jews that resided in and around the places called Yampol in Ukraine since the times of the Russian Empire. The Lithuanized form is Jampolskis and the Polonized form is Jampolski.
Vladimir Sokolov may refer to:
Sokolov or Sokolova is one of the top ten most common Russian family names and has Cossack roots. The name derives from the Russian word "Со́кол". It may appear in Germanized form as Sokoloff or Sokolow.
Lysenko or Lisenko is a Ukrainian surname. It most often refers to:
Vinokur is an East Slavic-language occupational surname. The word "винокур" is an archaic name of the profession of spirit distilling.
Gorsky or Gorskaya is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Osokin or Osokins is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Osokina. It may refer to
Fomichyov or Fomichev is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Fomichyova or Fomicheva. It may refer to:
Turczyński is a Polish masculine surname. Its feminine counterpart is Turczyńska. In other Slavic countries it may be transliterated as Turchinsky or Turchinskaya (feminine). The surname may refer to:
Romanovsky (masculine), Romanovskaya (feminine) is a Russian surname. Other Slavic equivalents: Romanowski (Polish), Ramanauskas (Lithuanian), Ramanouski/Ramanouskaya (Belarusian), Romanovskyy/Romanovska (Ukrainian). All are toponymic surnames derived from any of locations named Romanów, Romany, or Romanowo, the latter names literally meaning "belonging to Roman."