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  2. Polish names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_names

    However, a married woman usually adopts her husband's name, and the children usually bear the surname of the father. The wife may keep her maiden name (nazwisko panieńskie) or add her husband's surname to hers, thus creating a double-barrelled name (nazwisko złożone). However, if she already has a double-barrelled name, she must leave one of ...

  3. Arkadiusz Myrcha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkadiusz_Myrcha

    Arkadiusz Myrcha (born 1 February 1984) is a Polish politician of the Civic Platform.He has been a member of the Sejm since 2015, and has served as deputy minister of justice since 2023. [1]

  4. Piotrowski - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piotrowski

    Piotrowski (Polish pronunciation: [pjɔˈtrɔvski]; feminine: Piotrowska, plural: Piotrowscy) is a Polish surname derived from the masculine given name Piotr ().The name, and its variations indicate a family's origin as being from a town, such as for instance Piotrów and Piotrowo, or a toponym (place name) deriving from a holding, manor or estate.

  5. Nagorny (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagorny_(surname)

    Nagorny, Nagornyi, Nagornyy or Nahorny (Russian: Нагорный, Ukrainian: Нагорний) is a Slavic masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Nagornaya.It may refer to

  6. Stępień (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stępień_(surname)

    Stępień, also transcribed as Stepien is a Polish surname. The archaic feminine forms are Stępniowa (married) and Stępniówna (unmarried). It is derived from the nickname based on the verb stąpać, "to step" and which literally meant either a peasant who acquired land/farm via marriage (przyżeniony) or "successor"/"heir". [1]

  7. Anna Przybylska - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Przybylska

    Anna Przybylska was born in Gdynia.. In June 2000, after only 9 months of dating, she married Dominik Zygra, a businessman. They got divorced after a year.

  8. Zawadzki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zawadzki

    Zawadzki [zaˈvat͡ski] (feminine: Zawadzka, plural: Zawadzcy) is a Polish and Ukrainian surname.It is a toponymic surname derived from one of the numerous locations named Zawada or Zawady.

  9. Wójcik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wójcik

    Wójcik, Wojczik, Wojczyk, Wojszyk (also variants of phonetic spelling: Woicik, Woycik, Woyczik, Woytik, etc. [1]) is one of the oldest Polish surnames, and the fourth most common in Poland (100,064 in 2009).