The @ Symbol Meaning and History
n 1972, Ray Tomlinson
sent the first electronic message, now known as e-mail, using the @ symbol to
indicate the location of the e-mail recipient.
@ SymbolIn 1972, Ray
Tomlinson sent the first electronic message, now known as email, using the @
symbol to indicate the location or institution of the email recipient.
Tomlinson, using a Model 33 Teletype device, understood that he needed to use a
symbol that would not appear in anyone's name so that there was no confusion.
The logical choice
for Tomlinson was the "at sign," both because it was unlikely to
appear in anyone's name and also because it represented the word
"at," as in a particular user is sitting @ this specific computer.
Before The @ Keyboard
Standard
Before the symbol
became a standard key on typewriter keyboards in the 1880s and a standard on
QWERTY keyboards in the 1940s, the @ sign had a long if somewhat sketchy
history of use throughout the world. Linguists are divided as to when the
symbol first appeared. Some argue that the symbol dates back to the 6th or 7th
centuries when Latin scribes adapted the symbol from the Latin word ad, meaning
at, to or toward. The scribes, in an attempt to simplify the amount of pen
strokes they were using, created the ligature (combination of two or more
letters) by exaggerating the upstroke of the letter "d" and curving
it to the left over the "a."
Other linguists will
argue that the @ sign is a more recent development, appearing sometime in the
18th century as a symbol used in commerce to indicate price per unit, as in 2
chickens @ 10 pence. While these theories are largely speculative, in 2000
Giorgio Stabile, a professor of the history of science at La Sapienza
University in Italy, discovered some original 14th-century documents clearly
marked with the @ sign to indicate a measure of quantity - the amphora, meaning
jar. The amphora was a standard-sized terra cotta vessel used to carry wine and
grain among merchants, and, according to Stabile, the use of the @ symbol ( the
upper-case "A" embellished in the typical Florentine script) in trade
led to its contemporary meaning of "at the price of."
The Meaning of @
Symbol in Different Countries
While in the English
language, @ is referred to as the "at sign," other countries have
different names for the symbol that is now so commonly used in email
transmissions throughout the world. Many of these countries associate the
symbol with either food or animal names.
Afrikaans - In South Africa, it is called
aapstert, meaning "monkey's tail"
Arabic - The @ symbol does not appear on Arabic
keyboards, only keyboards in both Arabic and English. The Arabic word for @ is
fi, the Arabic translation of at
Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian - In these
countries, it is referred to as the "Crazy I"
Cantonese - In Hong Kong it is generally
referred to as "the at sign," just as in England and America
Catalan - In Catalonia, it is called arrova, a
unit of weight
Czech - In the Czech Republic, it is called
zavinac, meaning "rollmop," or "pickled herring"
Danish - It is called alfa-tegn, meaning
"alpha-sign" or snabel-a, meaning "elephant's trunk" or
grisehale, meaning "pig's tail"
Dutch - Since English is prominent in the
Netherlands, the English "at" is commonly used. However, the Dutch
also call it apestaart, meaning monkey's tail," apestaartje, meaning
"little monkey's tail" or slingeraap, meaning "swinging
monkey"
French - In France, it is called arobase the
name of the symbol. It is also referred to as un a commercial, meaning
"business a", a enroule, meaning "coiled a", and sometimes
escargot, meaning "snail" or petit escargot, meaning "little
snail"
German - In Germany, it is called Affenschwanz,
meaning "monkey's tail" or Klammeraffe, meaning "hanging
monkey"
Greek - In Greece, it is called papaki, meaning
"little duck"
Hebrew - It is shablul or shablool, meaning
"snail" or a shtrudl, meaning "strudel"
Hungarian - In Hungary, it is called a kukac,
meaning "worm" or "maggot"
Italian - In Italy it is called chiocciola,
meaning "snail" and a commerciale, meaning "business a"
Japanese - In Japan, it is called atto maaku,
meaning "at mark"
Mandarin Chinese - In Taiwan it is called xiao
lao-shu, meaning "little mouse," lao shu-hao, meaning "mouse
sign," at-hao, meaning "at sign" or lao shu-hao, meaning
"mouse sign"
Norwegian - In Norway, it is called either
grisehale, meaning "pig's tail" or kro/llalfa, meaning "curly
alpha." In academia, the English term "at" is widely used
Polish - In Poland, it is called malpa, meaning
"monkey." It is also called kotek, meaning "little cat" and
ucho s'wini, meaning "pig's ear"
Portuguese - In Portugal it is called arroba, a
unit of weight
Romanian - In Romania, it is called la, a
direct translation of English "at"
Russian - Russians officially call it a
kommercheskoe, meaning "commercial a", but it is usually called
sobachka, meaning "little dog"
Spanish -- Like in Portugal, in Spain it is
called arroba, a unit of weight
Swedish - The official term in Sweden is snabel-a,
meaning "trunk-a," or "a with an elephant's trunk"
Thai - There is no official word for it in
Thai, but it is often called ai tua yiukyiu, meaning "the wiggling
worm-like character"
Turkish - In Turkey, most e-mailers call it
kulak, meaning "ear"
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