Aimee, the French orthographic pearl fashioned from Aimée and ultimately polished by the Latin verb amare, “to love,” unfolds as a quiet declaration of affection—less a shout from the rooftops than a handwritten note slipped beneath history’s door. Philologically speaking, the name migrates from the Latin past participle amatus (“beloved”) through Old French into modern usage, carrying with it the gentle patina of medieval courtly devotion; yet, despite its antique pedigree, Aimee maintains a contemporary cadence, evidenced by a popularity curve in U.S. records that undulates like a well-behaved sine wave—peaking in the disco-lit 1970s before settling into today’s dignified middle ranks. Literary circles recall Aimée as the luminous confidante of Balzac’s letters, while Francophone popular culture frames her as the archetypal heroine whose very syllables seem to exhale rose-scented promise. Thus, when parents choose Aimee, they do more than bestow a pleasant bisyllable; they enlist their child into a venerable lineage of cherished figures, a subtle yet enduring testament to the classical idea that, in principio erat amor—in the beginning was love.
| Aimee Semple McPherson - | 
| Aimee Canny - | 
| Aimee Carrero - | 
| Aimeé Teegarden - | 
| Aimee Osbourne - | 
| Aimee Baruah - | 
| Aimee Ng - | 
| Aimee Winder Newton - | 
| Aimee Richardson - | 
| Aimee Willmott - | 
| Aimee Friedman - | 
| Aimee Louw - | 
| Aimee Song - | 
| Aimee Carter - | 
| Aimee Brooks - |