Adore is the verbal spark that leapt from the Latin “adorare,” waltzed through medieval French cathedrals, and now twirls onto American birth certificates with a shimmer of modern word-name charm—meaning, quite simply, “to love deeply, to worship.” She sounds like a sigh of delight—uh-DOR—and carries the instant glow of a love song’s chorus, a valentines-day verb turned first name. Over the last two decades, Adore has tiptoed up the popularity charts, rising from just five baby girls in 2000 to well over a hundred little heart-stealers in 2024, proving that parents are increasingly smitten with this four-letter declaration of devotion. The name fits snugly beside fashionable cousins like Amore, Love, and Dream, yet keeps her own glitter by hinting at both sacred reverence and pop-culture sparkle (think drag-icon Adore Delano and countless “I adore you” lyrics). In storybook form, Adore is the heroine who turns every page into a hug; in real life, she’s the child whose very name feels like a kiss blown into the world.
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