<Li> - idis or - ides and - iadis or iades (- ίδης / - ιάδης): meaning' son of' or' descendant of' . The suffix - idis (often transliterated - ides in English and French) is the oldest in use . Zeus, for example, was also referred to as Cronides ("son of Cronus"). - idis was the most common suffix in Byzantium, Bithynia and Byzantine Thrace, being also used by Pontic Greeks and Caucasus Greeks in the Pontic Alps, northeast Anatolia, Georgia, the former Kars Oblast, and sometimes in Epirus, Corfu and some Aegean islands . Examples include: "Stavridis", "Koutoufides", "Angelidis", "Georgiadis". </Li> <Li> - lis (- λής). Turkish suffix for "of" a place, like the Greek suffixes - tis and - otis . Examples are: "Karamanlis" and "Kasdaglis". </Li> <Li> - opoulos (- όπουλος): meaning "descendant of", originated from the Peloponnese but has become very widespread . Examples are: "Stamatelopoulos", "Papadopoulos", "Gianopoulos", "Anagnostopoulos" and "Theodorakopoulos". It can also indicate ethnic origin, such as Frangopoulos (Φραγκόπουλος) meaning "son of a Frank", Persopoulos (Περσόπουλος) meaning "son of a Persian", Servopoulos (Σερβόπουλος) meaning "son of a Serb" and Voulgaropoulos (Βουλγαρόπουλος) meaning "son of a Bulgarian". </Li> <Li> - oglou (- όγλου): from the Turkish - oğlu meaning "son of", seen in families from Asia Minor . Examples are: "Tsolakoglou", "Ardizoglou" and "Patsatzoglou". </Li>

Why do greek last names end in opoulos
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