Lolita

"Variant of Lola. Sorrows"

♀ Femenino · Spanish
traditional spirited variant

📖 Acerca de Lolita

Lolita es un doble diminutivo español de Dolores (dolor), a su vez un nombre devocional de 'Nuestra Señora de los Dolores'; un nombre perfectamente común en la cultura hispánica durante más de un siglo, cuyas asociaciones en el mundo anglohablante fueron irrevocablemente alteradas por la novela de Nabokov de 1955, pero en España y América Latina sigue siendo una elección cálida y afeçtuosa.

📍 Detalles

  • OrigenSpanish
  • Género♀ Femenino
  • SignificadoVariant of Lola. Sorrows

🔀 Variantes y Nombres Relacionados

⭐ Personas Famosas

  • Lolita Torres — Argentine actress and singer (1930–2002), known as “La Novia de la Patria” (the Sweetheart of the Nation); one of the most beloved entertainers in Argentine history, she starred in musical films throughout the 1950s and 1960s and was a fixture of Argentine popular culture for over half a century; a name-bearer who carried Lolita with grace and national affection.
  • Lolita Flores — Spanish singer and actress (born 1958), daughter of the legendary flamenco star Lola Flores; she has had a successful career spanning music, television, and theatre, and is one of the most recognisable celebrities in Spain; her continued use of the name Lolita in contemporary Spanish culture illustrates its intact status in the Hispanic world.
  • Lolita (Nabokov's novel) — Celebrated and controversial novel (1955) by Vladimir Nabokov, widely regarded as one of the masterpieces of 20th-century English literature; the narrator Humbert Humbert’s obsession with the twelve-year-old Dolores Haze, whom he calls Lolita, gave the name a charged double meaning in the English-speaking world, demonstrating literature’s power to irrevocably alter the cultural weight of a name.
  • Lolita Davidovich — Canadian-American actress (born 1961) of Serbian heritage, known for her role in Blaze (1989) opposite Paul Newman and for her work in films including Intersection (1994) and Jungle 2 Jungle (1997); her continued professional use of the name Lolita represents its persistence as a given name in North American culture despite the novel’s shadow.