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In formal situations, multiple given names were presented in the following style: "Zygmunt, Józef, Erazm 3-ga imion Kaczkowski, urodził sie dnia 2 maja 1825 roku..." (Zygmunt, Józef, Erazm of three names Kaczkowski, was born on the day of the 2nd of May, in the year of 1825...) [ 2 ] In the case of two first names the qualifier "of two names ...
Anna Jakubowska (1927–2022), Polish World War II combatant; Bernd Jakubowski (1952–2007), German association football player; Dmitry Yakubovskiy (born 1963), Russian businessman; Franz Jakubowski (1912–1970), Polish–German philosopher; Fuad Yakubovsky (1908–1975), Soviet Communist party functionary and statesman
Burzyński (Polish pronunciation: [buˈʐɨɲski]; feminine: Burzyńska; plural: Burzyńscy) is a Polish surname and habitational name from the village of Burzyn in the Podlaskie Voivodeship.
The boy, born in 2005, and his family remained close with their former teacher and his parents allowed their sons and daughter to sleep over at Caron's house a couple nights a week, according to ABC6.
The Coat of Arms of the Maków County in Poland shows the Poppy flower from which the name originates, alongside the Polish eagle.. Makowski (feminine: Makowska; plural: Makowscy) is a Polish surname with regional variations across Slavic countries, such as Makovsky in Russia.
Banach (pronounced in German, in Slavic Languages, and / ˈ b ɛ n ɛ k / or / ˈ b ɒ n ɒ k / [1] in English) is a Jewish surname [2] of Ashkenazi origin [3] believed to stem from the translation of the phrase "son of man", combining the Hebrew word ben ("son of") and Arameic nasha ("man").
The Nobel Prize. This is a list of Nobel laureates who are Poles (ethnic) or Polish (citizenship). The Nobel Prize is a set of annual international awards bestowed on "those who conferred the greatest benefit on humankind", first instituted in 1901.