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'''Nagy''' ({{IPA-hu|ˈnɒɟ|lang}}) is the most common [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] surname, meaning "great".
'''Nagy''' ({{IPA-hu|ˈnɒɟ|lang}}) is the most common{{Citation needed|date=July 2020}} [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] surname, meaning "great".


The surname is also common among ethnic Hungarians in the northern [[Serbia]]n province of [[Vojvodina]], where it is spelled [[Nađ]] ({{Lang-sr-Cyrl|Нађ}}) and may be transliterated in other languages as [[Nadj]].
The surname is also common among ethnic Hungarians in the northern [[Serbia]]n province of [[Vojvodina]], where it is spelled [[Nađ]] ({{Lang-sr-Cyrl|Нађ}}) and may be transliterated in other languages as [[Nadj]].

Revision as of 03:06, 20 July 2020

Nagy (Hungarian: [ˈnɒɟ]) is the most common[citation needed] Hungarian surname, meaning "great".

The surname is also common among ethnic Hungarians in the northern Serbian province of Vojvodina, where it is spelled Nađ (Serbian Cyrillic: Нађ) and may be transliterated in other languages as Nadj.

In Romania, the name Nagy is sometimes rendered as Naghi.

Nagyová is a Czech-language feminine surname derived from the Hungarian surname Nagy according to the rules of Czech name formation.

It is transliterated into Russian and Ukrainian as Надь and rendered in English as Nad.

Notable people with the surname include: