Andrew is the English form from the Old French name Andreu[1] / Andrieu (now French surnames), themselves from Latin Andreas, from Greek-derived given name Andreas (Greek: Ἀνδρέας).[1] It is related to Ancient Greek: ἀνήρ/ἀνδρός aner/andros, "man" (as opposed to "woman"), thus meaning "manly" and, as consequence, "brave", "strong", "courageous", and "warrior".

Andrew
Pronunciation/ˈændr/
GenderMale
Name dayNovember 30
Origin
LanguageGreek
Meaningmanly, strong and brave
Region of originGreece
Other names
NicknamesAndy, Drew, Dru
Related namesAnder, Andros, Anders, Anderson, André, Andrei, Andreu, Andris, Andrius, Andrejs, Andrzej, Jędrzej, Andriy, Andrea, Andreas, Andrés, Ondřej, Ondrej, Andrean

Variants by language

edit

Masculine

edit

Feminine

edit

Surnames derived from the name and its variants

edit

Czech surnames

edit

Antonín Kotík [cs] lists the following Czech surnames derived from the name: Ondřej, Ondřejc, Vondřejec, Ondřejek, Ondřejk, Vondřejk, Ondřík, Ondrejk, Ondrejka, Ondříček, Ondřejíček, Ondra, Vondra, Vondrů, Vondrovic, Vondrovec, Onderka, Onderek, Ondrák, Vondrák, Vůndrák, Vondráč, Vondráček, Ondráš, Ondrášek, Vondrášek, Vondrouš, Vondroušek, Ondroušek, Vondruška, Vondrys, Vondrejs, Vondřejš, Vondrysek, Ondřiska, Ondřich, Vondřich, Vondřech, Vondrych, Ondrouch, Ondrách, Ondříšek, Oneš, Voneš, Vonáš, Vonášek, Vonásek, Vonka, Vonáček, Voňátko, Ondok, Vondulka, Andreáš, Andres, Andrýs, Endrys, Andrejs, Andrejš, Andrysek, Andrejsek, Andresík, Andreska, Vandruška, Andráško, Andrášek, Andrysák, Andrs, Endrs, Endrst, Endršt, Andr, Andrt, Andrák, Anděra, Anderka, Andriál, Andrle, Andrdle, Endrle, Endlíček, Andrlík, Andys, Endyš, Endrej, Jendrûlek, Povondra.[2]

Also: Ondráček, Ondrík.

French surnames

edit

André; North, Normandy and Occitanie : Andrieu, Andrieux; North : Andrez; East : Andrey; Limousin : Andreix; North, Occitanie : Andreu.[3]

East and West Slavic surnames

edit

South Slavic surnames

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. 1 2 "Online Etymology Dictionary". Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  2. Kotík, Antonín (1894). Naše příjmení (in Czech). p. 28.
  3. Albert Dauzat (édition revue et augmentée par Marie-Thérèse Morlet), Noms et prénoms de France : dictionnaire étymologique des noms de famille et prénoms de France, Larousse, 1980, p. 9a.