| What do you call the @ symbol? |
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| ::darkshadows:: (blood@thirsty.net) |
2008/06/11 18:27 |
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From: "::darkshadows::" <blood@thirsty.net>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rolex
Subject: What do you call the @ symbol?
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Date: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 00:27:43 GMT
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What do you call the @ symbol used in e-mail addresses?
That little "a" with a circle curling around it that is found in email
addresses is most commonly referred to as the "at" symbol.
Surprisingly though, there is no official, universal name for this
sign. There are dozens of strange terms to describe the @ symbol.
Several languages use words that associate the shape of the symbol
with some type of animal.
For instance, some quirky names for the @ symbol include:
apenstaartje - Dutch for "monkey's tail"
snabel - Danish for "elephant's trunk"
kissanhnta - Finnish for "cat's tail"
klammeraffe - German for "hanging monkey"
papaki - Greek for "little duck"
kukac - Hungarian for "worm"
dalphaengi - Korean for "snail"
grisehale - Norwegian for "pig's tail"
sobachka - Russian for "little dog"
Before it became the standard symbol for electronic mail, the @ symbol
was used to represent the cost or weight of something. For instance,
if you purchased 6 apples, you might write it as 6 apples @ $1.10
each.
With the introduction of e-mail came the popularity of the @ symbol.
The @ symbol or the "at sign" separates a person's online user name
from his mail server address. For instance, joe@uselessknowledge.com.
Its widespread use on the Internet made it necessary to put this
symbol on keyboards in other countries that have never seen or used
the symbol before. As a result, there is really no official name for
this symbol.
The actual origin of the @ symbol remains an enigma.
History tells us that the @ symbol stemmed from the tired hands of the
medieval monks. During the Middle Ages before the invention of
printing presses, every letter of a word had to be painstakingly
transcribed by hand for each copy of a published book. The monks that
performed these long, tedious copying duties looked for ways to reduce
the number of individual strokes per word for common words. Although
the word "at" is quite short to begin with, it was a common enough
word in texts and documents that medieval monks thought it would be
quicker and easier to shorten the word "at" even more. As a result,
the monks looped the "t" around the "a" and created it into a
circle-eliminating two strokes of the pen.
Another story tells the @ symbol was used as an abbreviation for the
word amphora. Amphora was the unit of measurement that determined the
amount held by the large terra cotta jars that were used to ship
grain, spices and wine. Giorgio Stabile, an Italian scholar,
discovered the @ symbol in a letter written in 1536 by a Florentine
trader named Francesco Lapi. It seems likely that some industrious
trader saw the @ symbol in a book transcribed by monks using the
symbol and appropriated it for use as the amphora abbreviation. This
would also explain why it became common to use the symbol in relation
to quantities of something.
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