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Horváth is a common Hungarian surname. "Horváth" is the 2nd [1] or 4th [citation needed] most common surname in Hungary as well as the most common in Slovakia. [2] [3] It's thought to derive from Hungarian horvát ("Croat") spelled without the final h in old orthography.
Horvat is a surname of Croatian origin. It is the most frequent surname in Croatia [1] and the second most frequent in Slovenia. [2] Its variant Horvath is very frequent in Hungary and Slovakia. [3] The surname originates in Croatia, Horvat being the older version of the word Hrvat, an autonym used by Croats.
Pages in category "Surnames of Hindu origin" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 278 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Pages in category "Surnames of Indian origin" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,074 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Rai (Hindi: राय; Urdu: رائے; Bengali: রায়; Nepali: राई) [1] is a surname in use since historical times on the Indian subcontinent ...
Debnath (sometimes Nath) is an Indian surname.The 'Debnath' community mainly belongs to the Yogi-Nath group which is listed as Other Backward Class in West Bengal. [1] Prior to independence, census statistics rarely included the caste name Debnath or Nath. 19th-century British sources mentioned that castes known as jogis or jugis existed in Bengal, Punjab and Rajputana.
The surname Rawat is a prominent family name in South Asia, particularly in India and Nepal. [1] It is commonly associated with Rajputs of Rajasthan, [2] Uttarakhand (Garhwal and Kumaon), [3] Himachal Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh. [4] The name is also used among various communities in the Himalayan regions and carries connotations of nobility and ...
Vishwanath (also spelt Viswanath, Vishvanath, Viswanatha) is an Indian surname and given name.It is of Hindu origin and derives from višvanatha, meaning "lord of the universe" (from višva, "universe" + natha, "lord," an epithet of the god Shiva), including the Tamil-Malayalam third-person masculine singular suffix -n, -m.