How is sign called




















Kelly, Orlando Florida usa First description of symbol is dated century IV, detailing how many "arroba" weight measurement about 25 pounds of a freight by seaway from Seville to Rome.

Victor, Alsasua, Spain There's an awful lot of opinion on this subject floating about, but nobody seems to be citing any references. The best I can find anywhere online is at Wikipedia but it's Wikipedia so take it with a pinch of salt! According to whoever wrote the article, it's formal name is "commercial at". Common names: at sign, strudel, rare, each, vortex, whorl, intercal, whirlpool, cyclone, snail, ape, cat, rose, cabbage, amphora. It also is used in email addresses.

Ray Tomlinson was designing the first email program. It is derived from the latin preposition "ad" at. It has been traced back to the Italian Renaissance in a Roman merchantile document signed by Francesco Lapi on In Dutch it is apestaartje little tail , in German affenschwanz ape tail. The French name is arobase. In Spain and Portugal it denotes a weight of about 25 pounds called arroba and the Italians call it chiocciola snail.

Retrieved April 25, , from Dictionary. Yes, means "at the rate of". Jim York, West Monroe, La. USA The symbol is correctly referred to as an asperand.

My nemonic is: ASP erand. Kat Fan, Austin, Texas Never mind what foreigners call it, to we Brits it's simply 'at', although its use for any other purpose than to punctuate an e-mail address or to indicate per-unit pricing is the mark of laziness or of a foolish desire to seem 'modern'.

Pete Wigens, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK An even more perverse use of the symbol is contained in a leaflet published by Stroud District Council, in which we are asked to 'Sign up for free email lerts'. Onti Chowdary, Bangladesh Just spoke to someone on the phone in Bosnia.

They called it 'a crazy'. Let me make some improvements. Source": from the Dictionary. It is derived from the Latin preposition "ad" at. It is not, it has nothing to do with "ad". It has been traced back to the Italian Renaissance in a Roman merchantile document signed by Francesco Lapi. But without any real connection, that is to say that there's no prove that the at sign originate from the Italian use. By defination is the "at symbol". It's a sign of great respect for them. One time when a "katutubo" which means native came in Manila, a city in the Philippines, he saw a very big billboard with the " " sign, and what the native did is he grabbed a lady crossing the street and took his clothes off and ruthlessly had sex with the lady.

The native was shocked that the people didn't appreciate what he had done and instead, knocked him down and locked him behind bars. In other words, the capital letter "O" pregnant.

It is possibly due to the visually apparent little "o" inside the big "O". To test, I retrieved translation audio-recordings of the phrase in multiple languages. People in these countries may still use the colorful terms in everyday speech, but this linguistic diversity is hidden from Google users. However, I suspect the will conjure a virtual linguistic zoo for years to come. From our perspective in language services, only human translators can capture these subtleties of local speech.

Scriptis works with in-country teams of culturally aware linguists when providing our clients with translation for marketing. How did the sign become a universal email signifier? Waoh, this is so helpful. I had assumed a lot didnt know what some of these signs mean.

Your email address will not be published. Skip to content Below is an overview of 85 frequently used characters, punctuation symbols or signs that are included in most fonts. Uppercase ae. Almost equal to. Approximately equal to.

Reverse Solidus. Broken Vertical Bar. Left Curly Bracket. Right Curly Bracket. Double dagger. Diaeresis or Umlaut. Division Sign. Dollar Sign. Em Dash. En Dash. Equal Sign. Euro Sign. Exclamation Mark. Female Sign. One Half. One Quarter. One Third. Three Quarters. Two thirds. Full Stop. Grave Accent. Greater Than Sign. Identical To Sign. Inverted Exclamation Mark. Inverted Question Mark. Less Than Sign. Lozenge Sign. Male Sign. Micro Sign. Minus Sign. Another popular theory is that it was used to indicate amphora — a unit of measurement based on the capacity of large terracotta jars called amphora jars, which were used for shipping wine, spices, and grain since the 6th century.

The first recorded use of the at sign though was in a letter by Francesco Lapi, a Florentine merchant who used it to indicate amphora. Interested in learning more about the origins of , and what other countries call it?



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