<Ul> <Li> Alouwi, Arabic variant, of Sephardic origin </Li> <Li> Aguiló - surname to the Jews from Mallorca (Xuetes). </Li> <Li> Bazes--a Levite Surname . </Li> <Li> Benveniste - a Sephardic Levite surname . </Li> <Li> Epstein - one of the European lineages descended from Zerahiah Ha - Levi of Sepharad </Li> <Li> HaLevi, Halevi and Halevy - Hebrew language and all translate to "the Levi" or "the Levite". </Li> <Li> Horowitz HaLevi, or simply Horowitz / Hurwitz / Gurvich / Gurevich - a European Levite surname, tracing to Isaiah Horowitz HaLevi - a descendant of Zerahiah Ha - Levi of Sepharad </Li> <Li> Lavi - a common Levite surname </Li> <Li> Leevi - Finnish variation . </Li> <Li> Lev - simplified Russian variation of Levi </Li> <Li> Levai and Levay - a Levitic surname, originally meaning "a person from Levice" but today it is used by Jews who were forced to change their name during the Holocaust . </Li> <Li> Leven - Swedish variation . </Li> <Li> Lévi, Levi, Lévy or Levy - Hebrew for "Levite", equally common in Ashkenasic and Sephardic groups . </Li> <Li> Levian / Livian / Benlevi / Liviem - Persian - Jewish variations . </Li> <Li> Lević, - also Levinić, Prelević, Croatian or Serbian variations . </Li> <Li> Levin - Russian variation, also Levine, Lavin or Lavine (/ ləˈviːn /, rhyming with "ravine", or in some cases further anglicised to / ləˈvaɪn /, rhyming with "divine") and Lewin a Polish variation . Sometimes supplemented with German "thal" (valley) to Levinthal or Leventhal and - sohn and - son to Levinson or Levinsohn as a patronymic, and with Slavic - ski and - sky suffixes Levinski, Levinsky, Lewinski and Lewinsky (the "e" often replaced with "a" in German areas). </Li> <Li> Levit, - also Levitt, typically from the Bessarabia region of Romania, Moldova and southern Ukraine . </Li> <Li> Levita - Elia Levita, an ancestor of David Cameron </Li> <Li> Leviyev - the Russified surname (adding the yev / ev) that many Bukharian Jews of Central Asia have . Sometimes spelled Leviev or even Levaev . </Li> <Li> Lewi or Lewj (Polish, Levi and Levy) </Li> <Li> Lewicki - Polish "of the Levites", also Lewicka, Lewycka, Lewycki, Lewycky, Lewicky, Levicki, Levicky (can also originate from placenames in Poland). </Li> <Li> Lewita: - Polish Levite or Levita Latinized, with Slavic suffix - an / in Lewitan, Levitan, Levitin, Lewitin, Lewitinn, and with additional suffix - ski / sky Levitanski, Lewitanski, Levitansky, also Lewitas, Levitas, Lithuanian, Belorussian, Leyva Spanish Sephardic, also but rare Lefite, Lafite, Lafitte, of French Sephardic origin . </Li> <Li> Variants from Yiddish Leyvik, a pet form of Leyvi: Levitch Ukrainian variant, also Levicz, Levis, Levitz, Lewicz, Lewitz, Lewis, and with - ski and - sky suffixes Leviczky, Levitski, Levitsky, Lewitski and Lewitsky ("e" and "s" often replaced with "a" and "z" in German areas). </Li> <Li> Loewy, Löwi, Löwy and Loewe German or Swiss variations (although the usual origin for these names is Löwe, the German word for "lion"). </Li> <Li> Segal - shortened "Segen Levi" (secondary Levite) </Li> <Li> Urfali or Levi Urfali (also Levi Abud, Levi Aslan, Levi Hamami - an Urfalim community surname, which was mostly Levite in origin </Li> <Li> Zemmel - shortened "Zecher mi - Shevet Levi" (descendant of the Levite tribe) </Li> </Ul> <Li> Alouwi, Arabic variant, of Sephardic origin </Li> <Li> Aguiló - surname to the Jews from Mallorca (Xuetes). </Li> <Li> Bazes--a Levite Surname . </Li>

What is the difference between levites and priests