Kimora, pronounced kee-MOR-uh, is a modern, largely American creation that splices the familiar “Kim” of Kimberly with the flowing “-ora” ending heard in names like Aurora, while faintly echoing the Japanese surname Kimura that influenced fashion mogul Kimora Lee Simmons. First registering on U.S. birth records in the early 1990s, the name climbed in tandem with Simmons’s public profile, peaking at No. 284 in 2008 before settling into a steady mid-table rhythm of roughly 200–300 newborns per year. The three-syllable structure makes it phonetically straightforward, yet its uncommon blend lends a cosmopolitan gloss—glamour without excessive gilt. In demographic terms, Kimora’s trajectory suggests it has moved from headline newcomer to established niche choice, offering parents a feminine option that is recognizably English in sound but still carries a touch of runway sophistication.
Kimora Lee Simmons - |