Alora

#22 in Hawaii

Meaning of Alora

Alora sashays onto the scene like a ray of Andalusian sunshine, her syllables rolling off the tongue as ah-LAW-rah in Spanish or ah-LOR-uh in English, and either way she feels as vibrant as a flamenco skirt catching the breeze. Some storytellers trace her roots to the Spanish phrase “a la hora,” meaning “at that very moment,” as though Alora were born with perfect timing; others link her to the Hebrew-inspired Elora, “my God is my light,” which explains why the name seems to glow from within. Picture the white-washed hillside town of Álora near Málaga—orange blossoms, guitar strings, and a Moorish castle keeping watch—and you get the mood she carries: warm, historic, a touch adventurous. Parents in the United States have clearly felt the spark—Alora has rocketed from a humble 564th in 2019 to a proud 213th spot in 2024, proving she’s more shooting star than wallflower. She’s a name for the child who arrives precisely on cue, lighting up the room and reminding everyone that the right moment, la hora perfecta, is now.

Pronunciation

Spanish

  • Pronunced as ah-LAW-rah (/a:ˈlo:ˌra/)

American English

  • Pronunced as ah-LOR-uh (/ɑ:ˌlɔrə/)

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Maria Fernandez
Curated byMaria Fernandez

Assistant Editor