Patricia
WiktionaryText
Etymology
; later also seen as the feminine form of the saint's name Patrick.
- The name was formerly rare in English, but became popular in the 20th century, partly due to Princess Patricia (1886-1974), a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, so named since she was born on St. Patrick's day.
Quotations
- 1904 Carolyn Wells: Patty at Home BiblioBazaar,LLC 2007. ISBN 1434621162 page 36:
- - - - Our house is not of the era of Queen Isabella, but of the Princess Patricia."
- "That sounds like Aunt Isabel. They always call me Patricia there. Don't you think, papa, now that I'm getting so grown up, I ought to be called Patricia? Patty is such a baby name."
- "Patty is good enough for me," said Mr. Fairfield. "If you want to be called Patricia, you must get somebody else to do it. I dare say you could hire somebody for a small sum per week to call you Patricia for a given number of times every day."
- "Now, you're making fun of me, papa; but I do want to grow up dignified, and not be a silly schoolgirl all my life."
- 1991 Joyce Carol Oates: Heat And Other Stories. Dutton 1991. ISBN 0525933301
- "Trix" was a derivation of Trish, our mother's girlhood name, or cognomen, as she called it; Trish was itself a derivation of Patricia. Trix disliked her original name because she thought it prissy and old-fashioned, but she didn't much like "Trix" either.
Proper noun
- , cognate to English Patricia.
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Proper noun
- , feminine form of Patrice.
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Proper noun
- , cognate to Patricia.
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Proper noun
- borrowed from English in the 20th century.
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Proper noun
- , feminine from of Patricio, cognate to English Patricia.
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Proper noun
- borrowed from English, popular in the end of the 20th century.