Hispanic last names that end with a "z" are typically of Spanish origin, as "z" is a common letter in the Spanish language. Those that end with an "s" may have a variety of origins, including Spanish, Portuguese, or indigenous languages. The variation in endings reflects the diverse cultural influences present in Hispanic countries.
Josef Stalin, Suzuki, and Spear.
they have diffrent last names because the are not really brother s.
Bismark
Some Haitian last names beginning with "S" include Saint-Louis, Sylvain, Simon, and Saint-Fleur.
J.D. Salinger is one.
Shel Silverstein is one poet with a last name beginning with S.
Because the Department of Defense does not maintain statistics on who should (or should not) be classified as Hispanic it becomes a guessing game at best. The 1970 census figures show that the US population was 4.5 percent Hispanic. Using names alone to determine the needed information is a less than scientific method but it yields about 3,190 names that seem to be Hispanic or 5.5 percent of the US deaths. There were 58 Lopez(s), 82 Rodriguez(s), 53 Hernandez(s), 85 Gonzalez(s) and 102 Garcia's killed in Vietnam.
Not necessarily. Some Italian last names end in a consonant, such as "Rossi" or "Bianchi."
Thomas, Fredrick
· Ulysses S. Grant
Cece Jones.