Wikipedia
Mazur can refer to:
- Masurians or Mazurs, a Slavic ethnic group with historic origins in the Polish region of Masovia
- Mazur (surname), including a list of people so named
- Mazur (dance), a traditional Polish folk dance
- Mazur, Iran, a village in Markazi Province, Iran
- ORP Mazur, a Polish pre-war torpedo boat
Mazur is a traditional Polish folk dance from Masovia.
Mazur (archaic feminine: Mazurowa, plural Mazurowie) is the 14th most common surname in Poland (68,090 people in 2009). The word signifies membership in the Masurians ethnic group.
Over 70% of people with this surname live in the south of Poland (mainly between Katowice and Lublin).
Usage examples of "mazur".
She lived with my parents now that Grandpa Mazur was scarfing down his normal two-eggs-and-a-half-pound-of-bacon breakfast in the hereafter.
I parked on the street and ran around the Jeep to help Grandma Mazur get out.
Grandma Mazur rushed forward and put her purse on a folding chair in the second row.
The men moved forward two by two, and Grandma Mazur went up on tiptoe, pivoting on her patentleather spikes to get a good look.
Her heel caught in the carpet and Grandma Mazur pitched back, her body board stiff.
I snagged Grandma Mazur by the elbow, gathered her belongings together, and steered her toward the door, almost knocking Spiro over in my haste.
Grandma Mazur had a Wild West image of bounty hunters breaking down doors with six shooters blazing.
Grandma Mazur immediately began elbowing her way to the front with me in tow.
Grandma Mazur was on the edge of her seat, nose pressed to the window.
Grandma Mazur and I quietly entered the funeral parlor and scoped the place out.
Grandma Mazur and I huddled close to the door, ever on the alert should my car cruise by.
Grandma Mazur in the Lay-Z-Boy rocker and reasure my mother that nothing terrible had happened to us on Stark Street .
I had my father come to rescue Grandma Mazur, and while I waited for the tire to be replaced, I tried to imagine Kenny sneaking into the funeral home and leaving the note.
Grandma Mazur spoke first, and when she did it was with a touch of wistfulness.
At eleven I used my cellular phone to call my mother and make sure Grandma Mazur was okay.