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[Opinions] Isael
I came across this boy name today.
I think Isael sounds really cool. I would pronounce it ee-sa-EL but I only read it so I am not sure what the pronunciation should be. I am just going with what it looks like to me. Some people may read it as eye-sail o something like that (I prefer my version)
I like many boy names that end in EL, and I think this one may make my top 100.
I realize it may be too "feminine" to some, but I think it's sweet.
Thoughts?

This message was edited 8/31/2015, 10:25 AM

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Isael looks like a typo for Isabel or Israel.
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I prefer Israel, since Isael looks like a typo.
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I initially misread the name as Israel, which would likely happen to someone named Isael today.I agree with your pronunciation of the name, though, and don't think it sounds too feminine. Not my style, though.
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I don't think it's to feminine, because I see Israel without the r. I would need a more concrete pronunciation to have an opinion. But I don't enjoy the look of it.
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It looks like a typo for Isabel. I'm not a fan.
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Hmm. I don't hate Isael but it feels incomplete, like it's the ending of a longer name. Like the others below, I thought this said Israel at first. Either way, I don't think it seems "too feminine" and I don't know where that vibe would come from.You may want to also consider Misael. I knew a young man with this name and I always thought it was very nice... he pronounced it similarly to how you are saying Isael, just with an M in front.
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Ooh I like Misael. It sounds really sweet. Reminds me of Amiel which I also like.
I don't know, it's a letter away from Isabel, that's why I thought it may look feminine :)
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Ah, I see your point! I still wouldn't worry about that since there are so many masculine names that end with -ael. :)Amiel is very nice, thanks for sharing that as well!
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I never heard about this name before and at first I thought it's a form of Israel or Isabel. Though I like this name and would pronounce it the same way as you, it really seems sound the best for this name imo. I don't think that it sounds feminine, but see that people can consider ee-sa-EL as a feminine name. I rather don't like eye-sail, it sounds %uite strange to me. I like many of -el boy names and I think Isael is very interesting one.
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It looks like a misspelling/mistyping of 'Israel'; in fact, I misread it as Israel at least twice. Even Google gives the 'Showing results for Israel', but if I say, 'Search instead for Isael', it does of course come up with results, including a Brazilian midfielder named Isael da Silva Barbosa.According to ebabynames.com (which also comes up on my Google search), Isael is in fact a form (Portuguese) of Israel. It does not, however, offer any clues as to the pronunciation beyond that. :/ I'd guess, given the Israel connection, that your 'ee-sa-EL' guess is not too far off, though it might be closer to IZ-ay-əl or IS-ay-el (I really am not an expert on usual Portuguese pronunciations, though!).I'm guessing a lot of people would mistake it for Israel or even (presumptuously) assume it's a typo and attempt to "correct" it to Israel which could lead to a lot of frustration to anyone named Isael. (I have a brother named Aidan who has endured a lifetime of people mispronouncing and misspelling his name, often with no logical reason, even when reading the name off a computer printout!) I don't mean to say that I think this is a good reason not to use the name. People (like me) can get used to seeing/hearing things they're not initially used to - how else can we ever learn? ;)The name is quite lovely. It has a sort of "softer" feel to it than Israel, I think, but it doesn't exactly sound "feminine" to me.
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Interesting. When I first saw it, it looked like Ismael which is one of my favourite names. I got it from the Internet, and the Isael in question is a young boy from the US. Maybe his parents are Brazilian?
I guess Isael may look like a typo, and it could be annoying to correct people all the time. But you're right, people can just get used to it, there are much more complicated names out there. P.S.: Aidan looks like the natural spelling to me. The first and only Aidans I met are from Ireland, where the name is used with this spelling. Actually, I was surprised when I started seeing Aiden, etc.

This message was edited 8/31/2015, 7:18 AM

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I hadn't even thought of Ismael, but that's also only one letter off! I guess since I'm more used to seeing it spelled Ishmael.(Almost no one was named Aidan when my brother and I were growing up, but he was named for one of our ancestors - we're Canadian and our background is mostly English, Irish, and Scottish. Now, everyone under ten is named Aidan or Aiden or Aden or Ayden or whatever.)
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