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Bengali Hindu surnames (49 P) Bengali Muslim surnames (43 P) S. Bangladeshi Muslim names (12 P) Pages in category "Bengali-language surnames" The following 25 pages ...
Pal was also a popular surname among the Parmar Rajput rulers of the Garhwal. [12] [13] Pal is a surname of the Thakuri people of Nepal. [14]: 22 Among Sikhs, Pal is often used as suffix to the given name or a middle name. [15] The rulers of Kullu held the surname Pal up to about the 15th century A.D., which they later changed to Singh. [16]
Surnames of Bengali origin (empty) Surnames of Hindu origin (4 C, 278 P) A. Agrawal (1 C, 6 P) ... Tamil-language surnames (6 P) Telugu-language surnames (27 P) U.
Chanda (Bengali: চন্দ) (pronounced [t͡ʃɔndɔ]) is primarily a native Bengali surname that is found among the Bengali Kayasthas, Barujibis, Baishya Kapalis and some other Bengali castes in the Indian states of West Bengal, Assam and Tripura as well as in Bangladesh. [1] [2] [3]
Das is a common surname among all classes of Bengalis including Baidya, Bengali Kayastha, Mahishya, Tantubay, and others. [2] [3] In Bengal, the surname is also used by both Scheduled Castes [4] and General Castes. In Bihar, it is used by people belonging to Ambashtha and Karn Kayastha castes. [5]
Lokeshwar Basu noticed Mandal surname among a section of Kayastha and Suvarna Banik. [7] [8] Mondal surname is commonly found among trading and peasant communities like Baishya Saha, Mahishya, Sadgop, Tili and some OBC castes. [9] [7] Mandal is also a Scheduled Castes surname, many from which has now become "social elite", according to Clark. [10]
Bengali Muslim families mostly use names of Arabic origin, followed by Farsi and Bengali. Among Muslims of Bangladesh, there are several different naming conventions. There is no fixed scheme for the structure of names. [1] Many people do not really use a family name, so members of a family can have different last names.
The law does not allow one to create any surname that is duplicated with any existing surnames. [20] Under Thai law, only one family can create any given surname: any two people of the same surname must be related, and it is very rare for two people to share the same full name. In one sample of 45,665 names, 81% of family names were unique. [21]