In the United Kingdom, some councils maintain lists of locally approved suffixes for new roads.
In Wales it is common to use Welsh-language suffixes (which actually usually precede the name) such as Ffordd, Heol, Stryd, Cae.
A few points of note on street suffixes in mainland Europe: Many local governments now require a street-name suffix to comply with emergency telephone rules intended to avoid spoken confusion, e.g. spoken Broadway could be misidentified as Broad Way.
Notwithstanding this, some street names historically and linguistically do not carry a suffix, e.g. Broadway, Rampart, Embarcadero.
While English street names follow British convention, they usually occasionally show local and international influences.