Patán is an adjective that can be used in different ways. Generally, the term applies to those who are gross or rude and have behaviors that can be described as barbarians.
For example: "I don't want you to marry that jerk: you can get someone of another level" , "My boss is a jerk but I have to be patient with him if I don't want to lose my job " , "Who is that jerk who chews with open mouth? How ordinary! " , "Don't be a jerk: help your grandmother load her luggage . "
A lout, Pashtun or Pashtun, on the other hand, is a member of an ethnic group from Afghanistan. The louts are Muslims and are often classified as warriors due to the many confrontations they had throughout history.
The louts speak their own language (also known as lout), which is derived from Avestan (one of the oldest Indo-European languages; there are records of its use in the 1st millennium BC).
Muttley, on the other hand, is a famous animated character that Iwao Takamoto created and is part of the Hanna-Barbera series. This is a dog, known in English as Muttley, who first appeared in "Los autos locos" (or "Wacky races" , according to its original name) as Pierre Nodoyuna's pet. The main characteristic of this animal is its particular laugh and the murmurs it emits to communicate.
Finally, Patán is the name of a heavy metal band from Argentina that was formed in 1994 and has released five albums.
Patan, Lord of the Mayan underworld
The mythology Mayan that the underworld was ruled by known gods with the name of Lords of Xibalba (the last term in their language represented the underworld). It is about a series of very powerful and evil characters that plagued the road to Xibalbá with traps and dangers to prevent strangers from accessing it. The Lords were twelve: Hun-Camé, Vucub-Camé, Xiquiripat, Chuchumaquic, Ahalpuh, Ahalcaná, Chamiabac, Chamiaholom, Patán, Xic, Ahalmez and Ahaltocob .Xibalbá had two governors, Hun-Camé and Vucub-Camé, the gods of disease and death, respectively. They were the unquestionable judges and were in charge of assigning others their functions. On the other hand, there were Chuchumaquic and Xiquiripat, who caused human beings one of the many tortures: blood spills.
But the list of ailments goes on; Ahalpuh and Ahalcaná were in charge of causing terrible swelling in people and causing their legs to suffer horrible suppuration, in addition to dyeing their faces yellow, to complete the punishment that was called chuganal .
With a bone rod as a symbol of power, Chamiabac and Chamiaholom served as bailiffs of the underworld, causing humans to lose weight until their flesh was undone. For those who tried to return to their homes, Ahalmez and Ahaltocob were tasked with causing all sorts of misfortunes. Ultimately, Patan and Xic had been charged with killing those who walked the roads, and they did so by squeezing their chests and throats, causing nasty pools of blood to be expelled from their mouths.
The reign of these evil lords ended when the twin gods Huhahpú and Ixbalanqué appeared: the latter beheaded his brother and then brought him back to life, something that greatly amused the merciless twelve. So much so that they asked him to do the same with them. Ixbalanqué agreed, although he did not fulfill the last part of the deal , for which he killed them once and for all. In this way, human beings did not have to continue to endure the terrible torture that Patan and his eleven companions had subjected them for so long.