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Dolores
Never hear this one anymore. Why do you think that is? "And by the way, dearie, your punctuation sucks canal water!"
-The Ghost of Vivian Vance

This message was edited 6/2/2016, 7:46 PM

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Its just a very ugly sounding name. Also Dolores Umbridge is such a horrible character and in modern times that would probably be one of the only associations people have with the name and its not a great association. So combine those two things and the name is just not popular anymore.
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Dolores was pretty popular in the 1920s and 1930s, so obviously there's a lot of old women with the name and it's stale to the majority of parents.
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I don't think it was ever popular here, but a friend of a friend of mine has a little Dolores. Dolly is at #260 here and rising; maybe it'll catch on as a full name for it? The meaning is off-putting and maybe it sounds too Spanish for some people, but I rather like it.
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I think it's an older sounding name and it's neither cute nor frilly which are what brings names to popularity now.I really like it though. I think it's elegant.
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It's heavy and dolorous.
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It means pain. Also, Umbridge. It would be too hard to live the Unbridge thing down.
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I freaking love Dolores. It's nice and beautiful so say and spell. It's also a sexy name in my opinion, like Olga or Cleopatra
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It's a fine name. I wouldn't choose it myself but I would fawn over a new born baby named Delores.
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I hear it all the time still, mostly among older people (obv)... but my mum's school still has a few girls named Dolores. I think it's really beautiful. But, uh, I guess it's declined just because it sounds "old" (it's very "of-the-times" I guess), it'll spike again though, for sure. Maybe in ten years.
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Because it's ugly, probably. And it doesn't really even have any particularly well-known bearers, despite being relatively popular once. Dolores Claiborne, or Dolores Umbridge.
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