Price, pronounced “pryse,” began life as the Welsh surname ap Rhys, literally “son of Rhys,” and, much like a country lane winding out of the valleys, it has meandered from family name to quietly distinctive first name on both sides of the Atlantic; its etymological root in Rhys (“ardor” or “enthusiasm”) offers a warm flicker beneath the surface, even as the modern English word “price” lends a wry, value-laden double meaning that can spark the occasional dry joke at roll call. In the United States, Price has never clamored for the spotlight—its annual tallies have hovered in the low dozens for over a century, typically anchoring it between the 600s and 900s in the Social Security charts—yet this very constancy gives it a subtle integrity, suggesting parents who favor heritage over hype. Pair that steady statistical heartbeat with its crisp one-syllable punch, and the name evokes both the stoic reliability of a trusted ledger and the understated elegance of a tailored tweed, making Price an appealing choice for families seeking a nod to Welsh roots, a dash of Anglo-American polish, and a moniker that quietly asserts, “quality over quantity.”
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