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[Opinions] Carmel and Carmen (EDITED)
Do you like Carmel for a girl? I love the meaning of 'garden'.RoxStar just made me think of the name Carmen. I used to dislike it but it's really growing on me. Do you prefer it to Carmel?

This message was edited 3/13/2018, 10:30 AM

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Carmel is a no for me. It's how I pronounce caramel and food names are always a no.Carmen is ok. I pair it with Where In The World... Loved the show/game
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Carmel is close to both camel and caramel. And then there's the biblical Mount. I'd avoid it. And so would most South Africans - don't think I've ever spotted a single one.Carmen isn't a role model character, but she lights up the opera stage all right. I can think of two that I've known: one in her 80s and one in her, um, 40s. Not the top of my list by any means, but not bad at all.
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I prefer Carmel to Carmen. Carmen makes me think of a huge opera singer. It just seems so....really Spanish, I guess? So much so, that when I knew a little girl named Carmen 18-20 years ago, a little girl with no Spanish ancestry, the name so surprised me. Carmen also makes me think of men who drive cars or are obsessed with cars....carmen. I just really don't care for it. Carmel, while not a favorite, is much better IMO.I don't pronounce the word "caramel" like Carmel, and have never heard anyone do so, so that's not an issue for me. I know only from reading that some Americans do. But since I've never personally known an American who does, it's not an issue. "Caramel" and Carmel are very different to me.
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I've always liked Carmen. Carmel is too much like the candy.
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The local Catholic church is "Our Lady of Mount Carmel," and Carmel is pronounced like caramel (that is, KAHR-məl in our regional accent), so I've never actually thought of it as a personal name. Pronounced kahr-MEL (pretty much the correct way), it's intriguing, but it would be too weird to use in my neighborhood.Carmen is cool. Sophisticated, charming, sexy even. Like a "Bond girl." I can't imagine a shy Carmen.
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I would prefer Carmen to Carmel!
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It's okay. The meaning is nice, and I don't think I'd mind being named Carmel, but mostly it sounds like a place to me (there's a place in California as well as Indiana called Carmel, and it also reminds me of Cozumel in Mexico) or similar sounding words like caramel and camel instead of a person.eta:
Based on sound/meaning, I like Carmel and Carmen about equally, but Carmen sounds more namey to me, so if I had to use one, I'd probably go with that.

This message was edited 3/13/2018, 10:50 AM

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No, it's too similar to caramel, and a lot of people pronounce caramel just like carmel.
Carmen is very similar in sound but I think it's a lot prettier.
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