Ambar glows with the soft, honey-gold light of its root word—“ámbar,” the Spanish term for the gemstone amber—yet the name reaches even higher, borrowing from Sanskrit, where “ambar” means “sky” or “celestial robe.” It’s a lyrical choice that lets parents tuck both earth and heaven into five tidy letters. In English-speaking homes, it’s typically voiced as AHM-bahr, while Spanish speakers clip the final sound just a touch, AHM-bar; either way, the opening syllable rolls out warm and assured. Ambar has hovered in the lower half of the U.S. Top 1,000 since the late ’70s, quietly gathering a small but steady following—think of a lantern glowing at the edge of a campfire circle rather than a blazing spotlight. For many families, that under-the-radar charm is the appeal: Ambar feels familiar yet still invites a second look, conjuring images of autumn light, ancient forests, and skies just after sunset.
| Ambar Sengupta - |
| Ambar Lucid - |
| Ambar Bahadur Rayamajhi - |