No. Just like English there is no single suffix to distinguish some one from a particular country, city or ethnic group. Chinese, Japanese, Judio, Michigander, German, Norwegian, Russian, Muscovite, New Yorker.
For the record people and things from Spain, Ireland and Britain are known as Españoles, Irlandeses y Britanicos in Spanish.
It means little or small.
Translation of 'es que' (two words) = 'It's that/because....' But as a suffix, '-esque' = '-esco'. For example: 'picturesque' = 'pintoresco' 'arabesque' = arabesco'
The word sostenibilidad is a Spanish word that translates to sustainability in English. Here's a small tip for foreign words that end in suffix dad, that usually means the word is Spanish and translated from an English word that ends in the suffix ity.
Words that are suffix-less are called root words.
Irish, Scottish, English, Spanish, dish, fish, parish,Polish,
Words do not begin with a suffix. A suffix come at the end of a word.
Words with the suffix ance:acceptanceappearancearroganceassistanceclearancecompliancecontinuancedisappearancedistanceeleganceentrancegrievancemaintenanceperformancepredominanceresistancetolerancesubstancetemperanceviligance
The Suffix word of lonely is -ly.
Some words that have the suffix as morph are:metamorphosisbimorphbimorphemicbimorphsbiomorphicdimorphdimorphicdimorphism
-idle isn't a suffix. There are words that end with -idle, like bridle, but it isn't a suffix.
Words do not begin with suffixes. A suffix comes at the END of a word.
Some words with the suffix -cene are "obscene," "lucrative," and "innocence."