Arvil is a masculine given name employed within the Anglo-American onomastic tradition, whose provenance is subject to scholarly inference: one theory situates its origin in the Norman habitational surname Arville—itself derived from place-names in northern France—while another aligns it with the Latin Aprilis, the term for the fourth month, thereby implying associations with seasonal renewal and the onset of spring. Empirical data drawn from Tennessee birth registers between 1914 and 1949 illustrate its modest regional uptake, with annual occurrences ranging from five to twelve and corresponding ranks oscillating between 86th and 147th before receding into near obscurity by the mid-twentieth century. The appellation is phonologically rendered as AR-vuhl—transcribed /ˈɑː.vəl/ in British English and /ˈɑr.vəl/ in American English—which contributes to its austere sonority and imparts a sense of measured formality, characteristics that have prompted its occasional revival within vintage naming trends.