The most common is caramelle (plural) if you're using it in the general sense, as in "My kids like candy." Use una caramella (sing.) for "a piece of candy."
Occhio caramella.
Caramella literally means Caramel- a product of destructive melt-down of sugar- and is a form of candy. In Italian the word is extended to mean all forms of Candy, it is a generic term like say Kleenex or Levis. I have never heard of Caramella Girls- or as you have it run-on (a bad grammatic habit) into one word.
"Generale"
general, generic
"Dolce" means sweet or candy.
"Caramel" is an English equivalent of the Italian word caramello.Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It means "caramel" in the sense of the candy or in terms of the color. The pronunciation will be "KA-ra-MEL-lo" in Italian.
is there a prefix for the word generic
General, generic, genisis, genetic.
"To walk" is an English equivalent of the Italian word camminare.Specifically, the Italian word is a verb that means "to walk" in general. It is the present form of the infinitive. The pronunciation is "KAHM-mee-NAH-reh."
No, the word "candy" is a common noun, not a proper noun. It is a general term used to refer to various types of sweet treats, rather than a specific, unique entity.
Odierno is Italian. In Italian, it literally means "of the day".
Yes, the noun 'toffee' is a common noun, a general word for a type of candy.