It's a
Marian name a little too obviously, like
Mercedes. The popularity in the 20s-30s is usually attributed to
Dolores Del
Rio, an actress. I think it only hit mainstream because of a star named it, and that's not usually enough these days. I could see
Dolly seeming fashionable, but it's too hipster to become a fad name.
Lola has a chance, though.
I think in general, most people want names that weren't done to death in living memory, that weren't a past fad that became "old fashioned," and
Dolores was a past fad. It'd have to be a character on a really, really popular TV show - like Game of Thrones-level popular, or in a megahit movie or something. Maybe the one you mention is enough to give it a small boost.
I think
Delores is just an alternate spelling used by non Spanish speakers. My name dictionary says that
Delores was more commonly used by black people and
Dolores by whites (in 1960 Detroit) but there was a little overlap.
https://www.behindthename.com/top/beyond.phpDolores and
Delores show no activity! But I think it could come back a little bit, maybe in a few more years. If
Clementine can, surely
Dolores can.
- mirfakThis message was edited 7/18/2018, 2:58 PM