Kubicki Explained
Kubicki (Polish pronunciation: ; feminine: Kubicka; plural: Kubiccy) is a Polish locational surname, which originally meant a person from Kubice in Poland.[1] [2] Alternative spellings include Czech and Slovak Kubický and a Germanized variant, Kubitzki.
Language | Masculine | Feminine |
---|
| Kubicki | Kubicka |
| Kubický | Kubická |
Russian (Romanization) | Russian: Кубицкий (Kubitsky, Kubitskiy, Kubickij) | Russian: Кубицкая (Kubitskaya, Kubitskaia, Kubickaja) |
Ukrainian (Romanization) | Ukrainian: Кубицький (Kubytskyi, Kubytskyy, Kubyckyj) Ukrainian: Кубіцький (Kubitskyi, Kubitskyy, Kubickyj) | Ukrainian: Кубицька (Kubytska, Kubycka) Ukrainian: Кубіцька Kubitska, Kubicka | |
People
- Anna Kubicka (born 1999), Polish chess master
- Dariusz Kubicki (born 1963), Polish footballer and manager
- Eugeniusz Kubicki (1925-?), Polish footballer
- Ewa Kubicka, Polish mathematician
- Hanna Foltyn-Kubicka (born 1950), Polish politician
- Jakub Kubicki (1758–1833), Polish architect
- Janusz Kubicki (born 1969), Polish politician
- Jarosław Kubicki (born 1995), Polish footballer
- Klaus Kubitzki (1933–2022), German botanist
- Patryk Kubicki (born 1993), Polish footballer
- Philip Kubicki (born 1943), American businessman
- Terry Kubicka (born 1956), American figure skater
- Werner Kubitzki (1915–1994), German field hockey player
- Wolfgang Kubicki (born 1952), German politician
See also
Notes and References
- Dictionary of American Family Names. "Kubick Family History", Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved on 20 January 2016.
- Patrick Hanks: Dictionary of American Family Names, 2003, p.360 Online