Zakharenko
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
PronunciationRussian pronunciation: [ˈzaxaˌreŋ̊ko]
LanguagesBelarusian, Ukrainian and Russian from Hebrew
MeaningGod Has Remembered
| Pronunciation | Russian pronunciation: [ˈzaxaˌreŋ̊ko] |
|---|---|
| Origin | |
| Languages | Belarusian, Ukrainian and Russian from Hebrew |
| Meaning | God Has Remembered |
| Region of origin | Russia, Ukraine, Belarus |
| Other names | |
| Variant forms | Zakharov, Zakharchenko, Zacharias, Zakaryan |
| [1][2][3] | |
Zakharenko (Belarusian: Захаранка, Ukrainian: Захаренко, Russian: Заха́ренко; from the given names Zakhar (Захар), Zakhary (Захарий/Захарій), or Zakhariya (Захария/Захарія)—all East Slavic variants of the Hebrew name Zechariah—by adding the (primarily Ukrainian) Slavic diminutive suffix -енко (-enko)[4] with the meaning "young", "small", "son of")[2][3] is a Belarusian, Ukrainian and Russian masculine surname.[1][2][3][5] Notable people with this surname include:
- Andrei Zakharenko (born 1979), Russian association football player
- Sergey Zakharenko (born 1974), Belarusian skier
- Yury Zacharanka (Zakharenko) (1952–1999?), Belarusian military officer and politician
- Natalie Wood (born Natalia Nikolaevna Zacharenko, 1938), American actress