Bambino is the Italian masculine form for "child". The feminine is bambina. The plural forms are bambinos in English and bambini in Italian. These words can refer to:

Sports

  • Babe Ruth (1895–1948), Hall-of-Fame Major League Baseball player nicknamed "the Bambino"
  • Héctor Veira (born 1946), Argentine retired footballer and manager
  • The "Curse of the Bambino", a superstition regarding the Boston Red Sox baseball team
  • Gianluca Lapadula, an Italian-Peruvian footballer

Arts and entertainment

Music

  • "Bambino", first hit song by Dalida, which holds record for longest time spent on number 1 chart position, a total of 45 weeks.
  • Héctor el Father or "Hector El Bambino", Puerto Rican former reggaeton recording artist and producer Héctor Delgado Román (born 1978)
  • Tito El Bambino (born 1981), Puerto Rican singer
  • "Bambina" (Idoli song)
  • "Bambino (Napoli Lullaby)", a song recorded by The Springfields
  • "Bambina", a song in Nue (Lara Fabian album)
  • Nickname given to the singing and rapping duo Bars and Melody's fans

Other

  • Bambino, Bud Spencer's character in the film They Call Me Trinity and in the sequel Trinity Is Still My Name
  • Bambino, a male character in The Bridge, a 1969 Yugoslav war film
  • Bambino!, a Japanese manga
  • "Bambina," the nickname given in the anime La storia della Arcana Famiglia to Felicita
  • "Orient Bambino", a line of automatic wrist watches by Japanese manufacturer "Orient Watch"
  • "Hello Bambinos", was the greeting used by patriarch Martin Goodman (Paul Ritter) towards his sons in Friday Night Dinner

Wine grapes

  • Bambino (grape), another name for the Italian wine grape Bombino bianco
  • Bombino nero, another wine grape that is also known as Bambino
  • Cesanese Comune, another wine grape that is also known as Bambino

Other uses

  • Il Bambino, the name given in art to the image of the infant Jesus
  • Bambino cat, an experimental crossbreed of domestic cat
  • Fiat 500, known in Australia as "Bambino"
  • Bambino (ice-cream), Polish

See also

  • Bimbo, from the Italian for a (male) baby or young child