Fridman: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Proxagonal (talk | contribs) m Added Lex Fridman to the list of notable people with sirname Fridman |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
* [[Yasmin Fridman]] (born 1973), Israeli politician |
* [[Yasmin Fridman]] (born 1973), Israeli politician |
||
* [[Yonatan Fridman]] (born 2003), Israeli [[acrobatic gymnastics|acrobatic gymnast]] |
* [[Yonatan Fridman]] (born 2003), Israeli [[acrobatic gymnastics|acrobatic gymnast]] |
||
* [[Lex Fridman]] (born 1986), Russian-American computer scientist and podcast host. |
|||
== Fridmann == |
== Fridmann == |
Revision as of 13:44, 17 January 2022
Fridman ([ˈfridman], Template:Lang-ru) is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Fridman (crater), the remains of a lunar crater on the far side of the Moon
- Alexey Maksimovich Fridman, a Russian/Soviet-Israeli physicist
- Daniel Fridman, Template:Lang-lv (born 1976, Riga), a Latvian-German chess master
- Gal Fridman, Israeli windsurfer and an Olympic gold medalist
- James Fridman, British graphic designer
- Lev Fridman (born 1969, Sverdlovsk), a Russian auto racing driver
- Limor Fridman (born 1968), Israeli Olympic gymnast
- Mikhail Fridman, Russian businessman
- Olga Fridman (born 1998), Ukrainian-Israeli tennis player
- Yasmin Fridman (born 1973), Israeli politician
- Yonatan Fridman (born 2003), Israeli acrobatic gymnast
- Lex Fridman (born 1986), Russian-American computer scientist and podcast host.
Fridmann
Frydman
- Achilles Frydman (1905 - 1940), a Polish chess player
- Benoît Frydman (born 1965)
- Gérald Frydman
- Jean Frydman, a French resistant and businessman
- Maurice Frydman, Template:Lang-pl (1901, Warsaw - 1976, India)
- Monique Frydman (born 1943), French painter
- Paulino (Paulin) Frydman (1905, Warsaw - 1982, Buenos Aires), a Polish chess player
- René Frydman (born 1943), French physician
- Roman Frydman (born 1948), a Polish-American economist
- Serge Frydman
See also
- Friedmann (Friedman)
- Frydman (Template:Lang-sk, Template:Lang-hu), a village in Poland