# synonym # antonym # anonymous # patronymic # pseudonym # eponym # acronym # homonym
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Johnson, the son of John
No.
As far as I am concerned, the standard in Russia today is only to assign patronymics to people who have fathers with traditional Russian names. When I have been in Russia, for foreigners on visas and other official documents they will use your middle name (if you have one) in place of the patronymic and if you do not have a middle name, they will use nothing. I could make up a patronymic for the name Thomas but it would simply be based on the patronymic standards and what "sounds correct" to me and, thus, would not be official or necessarily accurate. I believe the same is the case for Ukraine as well.
Yes
manson1. Scottish (common in the Northern Isles): patronymic from the personal name Magnus.2. English: patronymic from the Middle English nickname or by-name Mann.3. Jewish (Ashkenazic): patronymic from Man 8.
English: patronymic from Garrett
Yossarian is an Armenian surname, a patronymic of uncertain origin.Other Armenian surnames, (answered from ancestry.com)Grigorian - Armenian: patronymic from the Armenian personal name Grigor (see Gregory).Hovespian - Armenian: patronymic from the personal name Hovsep, classical Armenian Yovsep(see Joseph).
Alcides.
The name of the first person to use a surname, as opposed to a patronymic, is lost to history. Most likely it was a king or important religious leader whose descendants wanted to emphasise their relationship to.
Patronymic from North German or English Powel.
Greek (Cyprus): patronymic from the personal name Nikolaos
It's a Spanish patronymic surname meaning "son of Martín."