Kohut

Look up kogut, kohút, or kohout in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Kohut, Kogut, or Kohout is a surname of Slavic-language origin, meaning rooster. Notable people with the surname include:

Kohut

  • Adolph Kohut (1848–1917), German-Hungarian journalist and historian
  • Andrew Kohut (1942–2015), American pollster
  • Alexander Kohut (1842–1894), rabbinic scholar
  • Bohdan Kohut (born 1987), Ukrainian footballer
  • Elisabeth Kohut-Mannstein (1843–1926), German soprano
  • Emanuel Kohút (born 1982), Slovak volleyball player
  • George Alexander Kohut (1874–1933), American rabbi, writer, and bibliographer
  • George Kohut (1943–2014), American camera operator
  • Heinz Kohut (1913–1981), American psychoanalyst
  • Ihor Kohut (born 1996), Ukrainian footballer
  • Jean-Pierre Kohut-Svelko (born 1946), French production designer and art director
  • Józef Kohut (1922–1970), Polish ice hockey player
  • Łukasz Kohut (born 1982), Polish politician
  • Michael J. Kohut (1943–2012), American audio engineer
  • Oleksandra Kohut (born 1987), Ukrainian sport wrestler
  • Oswald Kohut (1877–1951), German writer
  • Rebekah Bettelheim Kohut (1864–1951), American Jewish women's leader
  • Ron Cahute (1955–2023), Ukrainian-Canadian musician
  • Sławomir Kohut (born 1977), Polish cyclist
  • Stacy Kohut (born 1970), Canadian Paralympic skier
  • Vilmos Kohut (1906–1986), Hungarian footballer
  • Walter Kohut (1927–1980), Austrian actor
  • Zenon Kohut (born 1944), Ukrainian-Canadian historian

Kogut

See also

  • All pages with titles containing Kohut
  • All pages with titles containing Kogut
  • Kohout
Surname list
This page lists people with the surname Kohut.
If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name(s) to the link.
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Family names derived from the word "rooster"
Germanic
  • North Germanic: Hane, Tupp
  • West Germanic: De Haan, Haan, Hahn, Hahne, Hahnemann
Romance
  • Latin: Gallus
  • French: Le Coq
  • Iberian: Gallo, Galo
  • Italian: Gallo
  • Romanian: Cocoș
Slavic
  • East Slavic: Petukh, Petukhov, Kohut
  • South Slavic: Petao, Pijetao
  • West Slavic: Kohout, Kohut, Kocot
Other
  • Baltic: Gailis, Gaidys
  • Basque: Oilarra
  • Estonian: Kukk
  • Finnish: Kukko
  • Hungarian: Kakas
  • Japanese: Ondori
  • Turkish: Horoz