Has anybody ever come across the above names? I’m not certain on the pronunciation of the latter, so guessing it’s pronounced similarly to Corla? But would love to be educated on this! Thanks
I’m thinking Corla could be used as a short form for [name_f]Cornelia[/name_f] [name_f][/name_f]- which might be why its used in the Netherlands? [name_m]Or[/name_m] of Corleike, [name_f]Coralia[/name_f] or [name_f]Coralie[/name_f]?
[name_f][/name_f]Not sure about Coirla
Korla is a Sorbian name that derives from [name_m]Karl[/name_m], so perhaps Corla comes from there? It has some use in [name_m]South[/name_m] [name_f]Africa[/name_f], so it could definitely have some [name_m]Dutch[/name_m] or Slavic roots as a form of Carl/Charles.
[name_f][/name_f]Coirla reminds me of the Scottish Gaelic Coira (prn coy-ruh), as well as Coila (prn. coy-luh), so perhaps it could be a smoosh of the two? It could also be related to the [name_m]Irish[/name_m] name Cobhlaith, which is said similarly to cohv-la[name_f][/name_f] or [name_f]Orlaith[/name_f] (or-luh) with a C in front of it
I haven’t heard of either but (in an English-speaking cultural context) Corla could be a combination of names like [name_f]Cora[/name_f] and [name_f]Carla[/name_f] or an anagram of [name_f]Coral[/name_f].
Coirla looks Gaelic almost. Corla I am not sure. According to familysearch.org[name_f][/name_f], it is an Italian surname meaning cord-maker FamilySearch.org
[name_f][/name_f]I think it has a pretty sound