Krakowski
Krakowski (Polish pronunciation: [kraˈkɔfski]; feminine: Krakowska; plural: Krakowscy) is a Polish surname. It is a toponymic surname referring to the city of Kraków and environs. It appears in various forms in other languages.
Language | Masculine | Feminine |
---|---|---|
Polish | Krakowski | Krakowska |
Belarusian (Romanization) | Кракоўскі (Krakoŭski) | Кракоўская (Krakoŭskaja, Krakouskaya, Krakouskaia) |
Lithuanian | Krakauskas | Krakauskienė (married) Krakauskaitė (unmarried) |
Russian (Romanization) | Краковский (Krakovsky, Krakovskiy, Krakovskij) | Краковская (Krakovskaya, Krakovskaia, Krakovskaja) |
Ukrainian (Romanization) | Краковський (Krakovskyi, Krakovskyy, Krakovskyj) | Краковська (Krakovska) |
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Look up Krakowski in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
People
- Jane Krakowski (born 1968), American actress
- Joe Krakauskas (1915–1960), Canadian baseball player
- Serhiy Krakovskyi (born 1960), Ukrainian footballer
- Shmuel Krakowski (also Samuel, Stefan, 1926-2018), Polish-Israeli historian
- Wolf Krakowski (born 1947), Austrian-Canadian Yiddish-speaking songwriter-singer and guitarist
gollark: In a sane system, there would be more houses built to compensate for demand. Unfortunately in a lot of places there seem to be weird obstacles to this, like zoning stuff and people living there saying "no development, we must have high housing prices".
gollark: You mean "increasing prices because demand went up"? How terrible.
gollark: I don't think you can reasonably just blame landlords. Housing prices are a complex problem.
gollark: I would hope not.
gollark: There really should be a "ping online members of role" function.
See also
- Kraków County (powiat krakowski), an administrative division adjoining Kraków in southern Poland
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