释义 |
- See also
- References
{{Infobox given name | name = Lev | origin = Czech | image= | image_size= | caption= | pronunciation= | gender = Unisex | meaning = Lion or Heart | language = Czech | seealso = }}The name Lev may be of different origins. It is typically a first name, or less commonly a surname (e.g. in Czech Republic) of Slavic origin, which translates as "lion". Cf. Germanic form Löwe or Löw. It is also a common Israeli surname and uncommon female first name which translates as "heart" (לב, Loeb, Löb) in Hebrew. {{cn|date=June 2017}}. The name also appears in the forms {{Not a typo|Liev}}, Lyev, Leo and Leon. People with this name include: - Leo I of Galicia (Lev Danylovych in Ukrainian) (c. 1228-c. 1301), Knyaz (prince) of Belz, Peremyshl, Halych, Grand Prince of Kiev and King of Galicia-Volhynia
- Lev Alburt (born 1945), chess Grandmaster and chess writer
- Lev Artsimovich (1909-1973), Soviet physicist
- Lev Berg (1876-1950), Soviet geographer, biologist and ichthyologist
- Lev Brovarskyi (1948-2009), Soviet football player and Ukrainian coach
- Lev Chernyi (died 1921), Russian individualist anarchist theorist, activist and poet
- Lev Dyomin (1926-1988), Soviet cosmonaut and Air Force colonel
- Lev Grossman (born 1969), American novelist and critic
- Lev Gumilyov (1912–1992), Soviet historian, ethnologist and anthropologist
- Lev Hakak (born 1944), Israeli-American academic, novelist and poet
- Lev Ivanov (1834-1901), Russian ballet dancer, choreographer and Second Balletmaster of the Imperial Ballet
- Lev Ivanov (football manager) (born 1967), Russian football manager
- Lev Korchebokov (1907-1971), Soviet football player and manager
- Lev Kamenev (1883–1936), Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet politician
- Lev Kuleshov (1899–1970), Soviet filmmaker and film theorist
- Lev Khrshchonovich (1838-1907), chief architect of Kazan
- Lev Landau (1908–1968), Soviet physicist and Nobel laureate
- Lev Avnerovich Leviev (born 1956), Israeli businessman and philanthropist
- Lev Binzumovich Leviev (born 1984), Russian-Israeli Internet entrepreneur and investor
- Lev Loseff (1937-2009), Russian poet, literary critic, essayist and educator
- Lev Mei (1822-1862), Russian dramatist and poet
- Lev Naryshkin (1785-1846), Russian general in the Napoleonic Wars
- Lev Perovski (1792-1856), Russian count, mineralogist and Minister of Internal Affairs under Nicholas I
- Lev Pitaevskii (born 1933), Soviet theoretical physicist
- Lev Polugaevsky (1934-1995), Soviet grandmaster and author
- Lev Pontryagin (1908-1988), Soviet mathematician
- Lev Russov (1926-1987), Soviet painter, graphic artist and sculptor
- Lev Sedov (1906–1938), son of the Russian communist leader Leon Trotsky
- Lev Shatilo (born 1962), retired javelin thrower from the Soviet Union
- Lev L. Spiro, American television and film director
- Lev Tolstoy (1828-1910), often translated as Leo Tolstoy, Russian author
- Lev Trotsky (Lev Davidovich Bronshteyn) (1879-1940), often translated as Leon Trotsky, Russian economist and revolutionary
- Lev Vladimirovich Urusov (1877-1933), Russian prince, diplomat and tennis player
- Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934), Soviet psychologist
- Lev Weinstein (1916–2004), Soviet world champion and Olympic bronze medalist in shooting
- Lev Yashin (1929–1990), Soviet-Russian football goalkeeper
- Lev Yilmaz (born 1973), American independent filmmaker, artist and publisher
See also- Liev Schreiber (born 1967), American actor
- Lew (given name)
References{{given name}} 1 : Slavic masculine given names |