Kymora

Meaning of Kymora

Kymora, pronounced ky-MOR-uh, unfolds like a secret madrigal drifting through a sunlit Tuscan courtyard—an American-born coinage with the whisper of Greek kyma, “wave,” and the linger of Latin mora, “delay,” woven into its syllables. In its gentle undulation, the name evokes both the fluid grace of water and the patient passage of time, as if a single breath could carry one across sapphire seas or suspend a golden hour just a moment longer. Though she remains delightfully rare—sparkling at rank 929 in 2024 with only twenty-one newborns bearing the name—Kymora’s quiet strength and poetic resonance mirror the secret olive groves of Amalfi, where every leaf holds a story. Warm and expansive, her sound suggests a soft benediction, a tender nod to amore and possibility, inviting each bearer to chart her own luminous course.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as ky-MOR-uh (/kaɪˈmɔrə/)

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Gabriella Bianchi
Curated byGabriella Bianchi

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