What does your last name mean, /int?

What does your last name mean, /int?
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it means very important

Beautiful/sweet

silver sword, unironically

pride

>portugal
>important
nah

Reyes=kings
Very common

It's a patronymic variant of a name meaning "brave as a wild boar"

"Defender".
>we wuz
Hehe.

Hunter near the lake or lake hunter.

it means 'god will add' although it doesn't specifically say what, I assume more children

My last name is viking, it means viking.

Son of Haraldur

t. Haraldsson

There is no meaning of my last name

Miller

Son of a slavic fruit desert called Kisiel - yes i know it's dumb what can i do

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kissel

Son of Robin

my last name is just some small (300 people) village in Germany

I want to go for the novelty factor but I'm afraid the residents will think I'm some ancestry-fag. I would probably only spend a day though

Yep.

I don't really know. It's one letter away from being "son of Prokhor", but the way it actually is it's kinda meaningless.

Son of Jon

Prokherov?

not sure, probably a village or place in germany, its very rare

Prozorov.

My last name could come from Irish, Italian or Arabic. Its too rare to have a clear source.

Might be a mistake by a registrar. Might be related to "Prozorliviy"

"Red", from Scotland. Either red hair or pinkish skin which I have both

a guy who lives in somebody else's house

Squattinen?

>It is related to the name Fergus in Ireland
>In Ireland, the Ferris family of County Kerry derives its surname from the patronymic Ó Fearghusa.
Rather odd

Moustache, unironically

Son of Walter
I bet Walter was a sick cunt

A useful person who can dedicate himself to the world

And it says 형욱

My last name Kim just means last name.

Battle Wolf, apparently.

It's a Jewish name meaning "merchant"

Cow-boy

Frank, as in "to be frank"

sons of the crusher

i really can't find a meaning to it. it sounds similar to "tatar" but im not even a tatar, and weirder is that its wide spread in Hungary

White

cocks....

Veronesi
Means the one from Verona

Someone who lives in the valley of the river Tyne (northern England/Scotland border).

A nursery for fish or a vineyard

But the name itself comes from a Village in the Spainish part of Galizia

dude with the horns

I hope your ancestor eventually found his real dad.

...

"from the Coast"
I live by the coast

Does "having horns" not mean "this guy has a cheating wife" in Polish?

just random words put togethre, might have referenced a geographical location originally

yep, and "to give someone horns" means to cheat on someone
I guess its the same in russia lol

That's also a thing in Portuguese, not sure if it's true for other romance languages

same in arabic

literally this

son of hans
my fathers name is leif

when my earliest known ancestor became a clergyman in the 15th century, he took a name based on a lake in the area of his jurisdiction.

East mountain

Are you gonna change it for your kids? Give them the name Son of (you)? Or will you give them the same crappy name you got stuck with, named after some old relative no one even remembers?

solifuges are cute

youtube.com/watch?v=CUMndjb77SU

son of sancho
same in spanish

English isn't romance but, at least in American English (don't know about Anglo) this doesn't exist.

literaly saints

hey it's the same here kinda

despite the memes
it is
>Schultz
i have no idea

angel who love sea

Cool. How do you say it?

bani hashim

one with little spots

no they're just standard surnames at this point

and all my family has little spots on their skin, very appropriate

It's just a name from the Bible with a suffix that many Finnish surnames have.

Frisians version of Son of John. Not very interesting.

>Leighton
no idea

Son of Dermot

"what", actually it is just an interrogatory

I have no fucking idea, desu...

Freeman/Free

It's just the name of an old Anglo-Saxon village from 1000 years ago

Big Guys (4u)

Big People rather.

Please tell.

Same in german.

Sure, I get that. But at least in Sweden there's a law that allows you to give your children "traditional nordic" last names, i.e. take your first name and pop sson/sdotter behind it

archaic saying here, but have read it in old norwegian novels aswell

would be a weird thing to do, nobody does it anymore

My last name is Maggi. I don’t think it means anything though. Maybe an Italibro could tell me if it means anything.

I'll do that if I have kids. Would give them a unique name, and would give me a stronger sense of legacy in my lineage.

It means ancient forest.

>france
So, Arabic.

Kaufmann?

direct translation from faggy

From Hungarian for ‘left handed or clumsy person’

It's a church title, wiki says it means "to place in front"

I don't know about my first last name, but the second one it's Grant which meant grant

Metal

Just did a google search. Turns out it is the base name for a few different surnames like Maggiore, Maggorini, and Di Maggio. It derives from the ancient latin word “Maggiore” which means “Eldest Son”.

Roman's

The top or pinnacle of a mountain, or governor

He also is named like THE taste additive, supposedly developed for miners and poor people to get the good shit into them since they couldnt afford proper produce.