This is my cousin's name and I love it! My name is Ursula so I kinda like other unusual names.
― Anonymous User 11/5/2019
6
This is a quirky, funny name. It belongs to a free spirit, earthy kind of a woman. Perhaps an artist of some sort but not someone you would take seriously.
― Anonymous User 8/11/2019
4
Love this name. Lula was my great grandmother's name. She was the daughter of a Protestant Minister in Indiana and the youngest of 10 children. Half the people called her Lula and half Lulu. It was her given name not a nickname.
― Anonymous User 9/10/2018
6
It sounds like the name of a southern blonde. I have no idea why. I prefer Luljeta though.
― Anonymous User 12/1/2017
1
I can't picture this name on anyone who doesn't come from a rural area. It has "country bumpkin" written all over it.
This sounds cute and old fashioned (in a good way).
― Anonymous User 12/7/2016
6
My mother's name was Lula Mae. It is an older, outdated name of this century. My mom wasn't particularly fond of it. She was raised by farmers in rural Oklahoma in the 30's and 40's. Most Lula's are of African American decent. The name means "Famous Warrior". I don't think this name will stand the test of time and will fade in the future.
I much prefer the girl names Lulu and Lola. Maybe the name Lula may possibly grow on me in the future? Who knows?
― Anonymous User 4/8/2015
0
My grandmother's name was Lula. It apparently wasn't a nickname for anything; it was simply "Lula". She was born, raised, and spent nearly her entire life in Puerto Rico, and while I know the name can be Spanish in origin, no one still among the living in my family knows whether or not it was actually supposed to mean anything on its own. I like the name because I've always associated it with my Hispanic grandmother, but I can see how it might come across as... "rural", used in an American sense, I guess.
It does sound rather country-esque, but I actually like it. It reminds me of "Breakfast at Tiffany's" where it's revealed that Holly Golightly's real name is Lula Mae.
My great grandmother's name was Lula (although it got pronounced "Lulie" because she lived in the hills of Eastern Kentucky.) Anyway, I think it's quite nice.