Charls

boys:

722 births since 1886

#3865 (16th percentile)

overall:

722 births since 1886

#7017 (9th percentile)

Popularity Trends

This chart shows the total number of births per million babies in each year for the name "Charls".

1886 1987 18861987

Key Statistics

Total Births
722
Peak Births
24
Peak Year
1934
First Recorded
1886
Peak Percentile
3.6%
Current Percentile
0.7%
Peak Rank
#210
Current Rank
#708
Male statistics

How to Pronounce Charls

Our model found one way to pronounce the name Charls. Click the play button next to the name to hear the pronunciation spoken aloud.

Our model is 100.0% confident that Charls is pronounced as chahrlz.

1
100.0%

Possible Additional Pronunciations

These are pronunciations that other similar names use, but which are not currently associated with Charls. If you think any of these are valid pronunciations for Charls, please vote using the thumbs up button.

CHAH-ruhlz (2 syllables)
2 names 2.4M births
CH AA1 R AH0 L Z

Names with this pronunciation:

cherlz (1 syllable)
3 names 207 births
CH ER1 L Z

About Pronunciation Data

Our confidence scores estimate the likelihood that a particular pronunciation is the most correct for a given name spelling. These scores are derived from pronunciation dictionaries, manual verification, your feedback, and a fine-tuned large language model trained to generate name pronunciations.

For any given spelling, confidence scores across all identified pronunciations sum to 100%. However, these scores don't account for the possibility of valid pronunciations that our model hasn't identified.

The raw pronunciations shown (like CH AA1 R L Z) use the ARPAbet phoneme system, a standardized way to represent English speech sounds. Each symbol represents a distinct sound in American English. Visit the ARPAbet Wikipedia page to learn more about these phonetic symbols.

Pronunciation audio is generated by an open source text to speech model that has been customized to adhere to pronunciations provided in ARPAbet format, but sometimes pronunciations that differ subtly will sound identical, particularly if the only difference is the level of emphasis on a syllable or a single vowel sound.