Patricio—pah-TREE-see-oh—arrives with a trumpet flourish, carrying the old-world dignity of its Latin root patricius, “nobleman,” while salsa-stepping straight into modern life. Third-person observers can almost see the name time-travel: first honoring Saint Patrick in dusty Roman texts, then hitching a ride on Iberian caravels to the Americas, where it now flashes across Chilean soccer pitches and Mexican telenovela credits alike. The vibe is all velvet and fireworks: formal enough for a law diploma, playful enough for a backyard piñata. In the United States Patricio has hovered in the mid-hundreds on the charts for decades—never a wallflower, yet rare enough that teachers still pause to admire it during roll call. With its built-in nickname Pato (“duck” in Spanish, quack-up bonus included) and its effortless crossover charm, Patricio offers parents a passport stamped with heritage, history, and a dash of fiesta flair.
Patricio Manns - |
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Patricio M. Serna - |