Why do Russian names always end with words like "wa" and "ski"? What do they mean in Russian?
Russian ский, translated into Latin letters is Skiy, which is what we call "Ski", which is the suffix of Russian. Indicates who belongs to whom.
Russian names often have specific meanings, [such as Lev. Tolstoy, Lev means lion, and Tolstoy is fat (so Tovin is a fat lion, haha~)
Russian names are divided into three parts: name.father. Title. Surname. What is patronymic? For example: if the father's name is Ivan, the son's patronymic must be Ivanovich. From here you can see that his name actually has a strong patriarchal concept in it. Ski usually appears in the surname, which actually means which family (patrilineal lineage) the person comes from.
Therefore, the use of which sky is naturally wide.
By the way, with the same surname, the male surname is ский, and the female surname is often ская, which is Skaya. This is because Russian has a strict gender division, which is divided into yin and yang, neutral, and female. The inflection at the end of the word is to be consistent. And "husband" and "baby" are в and ва respectively