Kalinowski

Kalinowski (other spellings listed below) is a Slavic surname, most frequent in north-eastern Poland.[1][2] It comes from place names such as Kalinowa, Kalinowo, and Kalinów, which are derived from the word kalina ("Viburnum").[3]

LanguageMasculineFemininePlural
PolishKalinowski
([kaliˈnɔfski])
Kalinowska
([kaliˈnɔfska])
Kalinowscy
([kaliˈnɔfst͡sɨ])
Belarusian
(Romanization)
Каліноўскі
(Kalinoŭski)
Каліноўская
(Kalinoŭskaja, Kalinouskaya, Kalinouskaia)
LithuanianKalinauskasKalinauskienė (married)
Kalinauskaitė (unmarried)
Russian
(Romanization)
Калиновский
(Kalinovsky, Kalinovskiy, Kalinovskij)
Калиновская
(Kalinovskaya, Kalinovskaia, Kalinovskaja)
Ukrainian
(Romanization)
Калиновський
(Kalynovskyi, Kalynovskyy, Kalynovskyj)
Калиновська
(Kalynovska)
Coat of arms of Kalinowski noble family

People

gollark: (thread-safe reference-counting pointer to a mutex to a T)
gollark: i.e. if I tried to just pass a mutable reference to a map to all of the stuff I run in different threads, it'd be a compiler error, so instead it's a `Arc<Mutex<T>>`.
gollark: Well, you can spawn threads, and the type system prevents weirdness with concurrency.
gollark: Oh, and Rust has that nice thing where you can't keep around both a mutable reference and immutable references to stuff.
gollark: I'm not a C++ologist, so what happens if you, say, allocate a hash map in a function, then return a reference to an element in that hashmap?

See also

References

  1. "Kalinowski". moikrewni.pl. Archived from the original on 2012-08-28. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
  2. "Kalinowska". moikrewni.pl.
  3. "Kalinowski". ancestry.com.
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