Hannia [name]Corinne[/name]
Hannia [name]Nicole[/name]
[name]Carmen[/name] [name]Nicole[/name]
[name]June[/name] [name]Carmen[/name]
???
Hannia [name]Corinne[/name]
Hannia [name]Nicole[/name]
[name]Carmen[/name] [name]Nicole[/name]
[name]June[/name] [name]Carmen[/name]
???
I like Hannia [name]Corinne[/name] the best.
Hannia [name]Corinne[/name]: I really like Hannia. It feels fresh without sounding made up. A lot of n’s though.
Hannia [name]Nicole[/name]: I think [name]Nicole[/name] is rather dated. I prefer the fresher [name]Corinne[/name]. There’s also the Hannia Nicole. I would do Hannia [name]Nicolette[/name] instead.
[name]Carmen[/name] [name]Nicole[/name]: [name]Carmen[/name] feels more suited for a hispanic girl. I always get that vibe from the name. I don’t really like the n ending of Carme and n beginning of [name]Nicole[/name]. Carmen Nicole. I guess I never really like [name]Carmen[/name] for a girl because it’s “Car-men”. It seemed masculine to me as a child. Not that I’d name a son [name]Carmen[/name].
[name]June[/name] [name]Carmen[/name]: I like [name]June[/name] with something sweet. [name]Carmen[/name] doesn’t seem that sweet to me. I think that maybe because both [name]June[/name] and [name]Carmen[/name] are structured that it doesn’t work for me. By sweet, I mean lyrical and more vowely. That may just be a personal preference. [name]Every[/name] single name you’ve chosen has an so that may be yours.
In order of like:
Hannia [name]Corinne[/name]: beautiful!
Hannia [name]Nicole[/name]: prefer [name]Nicolette[/name] but still rather stunning.
[name]June[/name] [name]Carmen[/name]: sweet but rather structured.
[name]Carmen[/name] [name]Nicole[/name]: pretty. I think the two syllables for both are turning me off. [name]Carmen[/name] [name]Nicole[/name] doesn’t sound as beautiful as Hannia [name]Corinne[/name].