- a
combination of the father's name and suffixes. The
suffix is -ович (-
ovich) for a son, -овна (-ovna) – for a daughter. For example, if the father's...
- East
Slavic surnames Suffixes -ov, -ev, -in, -iy, -oy, -yy,
Patronymics -
ovich, -ovych, -yovych
Suffixes -ova, -eva, -ina, -aya,
Patronymics -ovna, -ivna...
- (French),
misspelling for
Breton -ig, diminutive[citation needed] -ich (-
ovich/-evich) (Belarusian /Belarusian Latin: -ič, [citation needed]–ovič, -evič/)...
-
Ivanovich Volkov" if male, or "[first name]
Ivanovna Volkova" if
female (-
ovich meaning "son of", -ovna
meaning "daughter of", and -a
usually being appended...
-
meaning Priest), "Constantinescu" ("son of Constantin")..
Russian ov /ɒf/,
ovich /əvɪtʃ/. Example: "Ivanov" ("son of Ivan"). ev /ɛf/,
evich /ɨvɪtʃ/. Example:...
-
derived from the Yiddish-language
personal name Zelig. The
Slavic suffix "-
ovich"
means "son of". The
surname may
refer to:
Getzel Zelikovitch [he], Egyptologist...
- for "–in/–ina" the form is "–ini". Historically, the
universal suffix "–
ovich" and "-evich" was
quite po****r in some
regions (bearers of such
names include...
- used, as in Amariei, '(son/daughter) of Maria'. In
Russian the
endings -
ovich, -evich and -ich are used to form
patronymics for men. It
would be cognate...
-
German and
English suffixes, like "son" or "sohn" and the
Slavic "in", "
ovich", "ovsky" and "shvili".
These surnames fill the air and the
pages of our...
-
written in
internationalized variant end with ch (i.e. -ich, -vich, -vych, -
ovich). This ch
comes from
Slavic "ć", "č", "ч", or "ћ". Therefore, the Swiss...