Kamile
Kamile derives from 'kamil,' meaning perfect or complete. In Islamic philosophy, particularly Sufism, it represents the state of spiritual maturity and wholeness where all human potentials are realized.
Yes, Kamile is the feminine form directly related to Al-Insan al-Kamil (The Perfect Man), a central Sufi concept describing the fully realized human being who reflects all divine attributes perfectly.
Kamile is extremely rare in modern usage, having fallen out of common practice after the Ottoman period, though it remains documented in historical records and Sufi lineages.
Kamile comes from the Arabic root K-M-L, appearing in words like 'kamil' (perfect) and 'kamala' (completion). It is the feminine form of Kamil, adapted into Turkish phonology.
Yes, Kamile appears in 17th-19th century Ottoman records, often among families of sheikhs and scholars, symbolizing the aspiration for a daughter to achieve spiritual and intellectual perfection.