"My Documents" should not be used as most of the files in "My Documents"
would not be "Documents" (eg. music, videos).

"Home" or "Home Folder" is incorrect, since this implies /home, not
/home/[user].

Using "[User]" (or "My Files", "[User]'s Files" or similar) would lose
the meaning of the /home/[user] structure. This would be the best option
if /home/[user] was, perhaps, replaced by /users/[user]. This loses
continuity with other Linux distros though that isn't necessarily a bad
thing - users ofter refer to Ubuntu separately to Linux anyway!
Compatibility wouldn't be lost with other distros since ~/ would
redirect to /users/[user]. Difficulty comes with transferring /home
partitions to/from other distros or older versions of Ubuntu.

"[User]'s Home" is the best option using the current /home/[user] system. It 
makes the "home" meaning clear whilst not confusing (indeed emphasising) new 
users with the difference between /home and /home/[user].
This issue with this comes with the translation. However, each translation 
could choose its own option, just use "User", or "My Home", or their own 
translation, or just the English word "Home" - after all, Ubuntu isn't an 
English word and yet we all know what it means, "Home" could be known by 
everyone to be the cosy place you go to while it looks after all your files!

As far as the English version of Ubuntu is concerned, I believe
"[User]'s Home" is by far superior to the other options.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/382703

Title:
  "Home Folder" has 3 different names

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