About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 37. Chapters: Belarusian masculine given names, Bulgarian masculine given names, Croatian masculine given names, Czech masculine given names, Russian masculine given names, Serbian masculine given names, Mate, Stanislav, Boris, Victor, Ivan, Vladimir, Mario, Yuri, Oleg, Dmitry, Bogdan, Anton, Ilya, Vladislav, Sviatoslav, Zoran, Alexey, Miodrag, Maxim, Daniil, Dalibor, Boleslaus, Anatoly, Danilo, Krasimir, Zlatan, Sr an, Dragomir, Alois, Vuk, Nikita, Ruslan, Bogomil, Miloslav, Zvonimir, Stjepan, Artyom, Mirko, Tomislav, Zdravko, Igor, Yermolay, Kiril, Zdenko, Branimir, Nikolay, Predrag, Bo idar, Lukyan, Hrvoje, Slavek, Marko, Vojislav, Ante, Ognjen, Andrey, Pribislav, Gennady, Osip, Nezamysl, Artemy, Genrikh, Antonin, Odolen, Timur, Atanas, Petya, Taras, Vanya, Vatroslav, uro, Gleb, Stipe, Svantovit, Pavle, Rustem, Mili, Nyja, Gordan, Vadim, Afanasiy, Izaia, Aleh, Yegor. Excerpt: Stanislav or Stanislaus (English, Latin) is a very old Slavic origin given name, meaning someone who achieves glory or fame. It is most often given in the Slavic countries of Central and South Eastern Europe. The name has spread to many non-Slavic languages as well, such as French (Stanislas), German and others. The usual Anglified form is Stanley. In Polish language, the name Stanis aw has the following diminutives: Stach, Sta, Stasio, Stasiek, Staszek. Variants: Stas aw, Tas aw. Its feminine form is Stanis awa. Stasiek, Stasio, Stach may also be a surname. Other derived surnames: In Slovene language, the name Stanislav is usually abbreviated either to Stanko, Stane or Slavko. / Stanis a (Belarusian), Stanislav (Croatian, Czech, Serbian, Slovak and Slovene), (Ukrainian), (Bulgarian, Russian, Serbian), Stanislas (French), Stanislaus (German, Latin), Stanislovas (Lithuanian), Sta islavs (Latvian), Stanislao (Italian), 'Es...