It's definetly a spanish name, so this means that person can be either from spain or from any former spanish colony, like most countries in latin america or the philipines. Brandito is not a very typical name, i think, so it could be an adaptation from a name in other language, like the english Brand, for example and Quijano would probably relate to a town called Quija or Quijo.
2007-02-07 02:37:31
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answer #1
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answered by chato_mc 2
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Oh, my God. Flip a coin... everyone is throwing out opinions.
Where a name comes from is less important than where the person or his/her ancestor comes from. That comes down to tracing the person's ancestors. For all anyone knows, the "original" could have been in Spain; moved to the Phillipines, descendents moved to Brazil, then 100 years later, to Cuba.
As for the first name, "ito" is a shortened form for a more formal name... probably Brando. It is the same as we might call someone named John to Johnny. Latin names that end in the letter O are normally male. "Little Brando"
2007-02-08 07:28:12
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answer #2
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answered by wendy c 7
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Probably from a Spanish Speaking Country. There are plenty of them. It might also be Filipino, Spain controlled the Philippines for 400 years.
2007-02-07 07:39:30
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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there are very many nationalities that are surnames, yet some not very previous, there are call ameliorations like Britain,Albion, Breton,ect, in case you look to the sub communities like counties, the quantity of names are huge eg. Cornwall-is, Lancashire, ect. going lower back to your unique question the call of somebody surname, grew to become into traditionally given by the two a proffession,a area, or a nickname,so how could one exchange right into a nationality till that guy or woman grew to become right into a immigrant to the area of thier living or start, eg an englishman say in wales or scotland, till that call grew to become right into a derivination of another. be conscious mis spelt or replaced or tailored as interior the occasion above (Cornwallis) interior the united kingdom we've lots of Hollands,french,Germain, which might lead you to the supposition of thier ancestory. regards LF
2016-09-28 13:17:40
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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I say the surname is of Hispanic origin. Beyond that, take your pick. It looks pure Spanish to me, but it could be many countries.
2007-02-08 14:24:35
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answer #5
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answered by Ariel 128 5
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This is Spanish. The "j" would be almost silent. My granddaughter speaks fluent Spanish and I only am able to speak and translate Comanche, French and I took 4 years of Latin; which is the basis for your "romance languages",i.e. French, Spanish and Italian and Portugese.
2007-02-07 02:16:42
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answer #6
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answered by graywolf1949 2
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Brandito sounds Italian or Spanish, and Quijano Spanish.
2007-02-07 01:33:02
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answer #7
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answered by Barbara V 4
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The surname's nationality is United Arab Emirates
2007-02-07 01:31:07
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answer #8
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answered by Santhosh S 5
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Spanish-speaking country
2007-02-07 09:41:38
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answer #9
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answered by mechi_shamrock 2
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Hispanic...possibly Mexican.
2007-02-07 01:30:32
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answer #10
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answered by Sandie 6
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