Arts & Literature4 mins ago
Proper name for ' at' symbol
13 Answers
Is there a proper name for the ' @ ' symbol in the way that star is called an asterisk?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by senga-marie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.generally it's known as "commercial at" but it depends on the language (for example one of the Dutch names for it is "apeklootje" which means "little monkey's testicle"
More here:
http://www.herodios.com/herron_tc/atsign.html
I was always told it was called an 'ampasand'(sp.?) and it derived from the days of accounts ledgers, where clerks were writing long lists of prices - 'Item' at 'cost' and because of the speed at which they wrote, the 'at' eventually became a single stoke - @ and found its niche with the arrival of the Internet.
Monday, August 7, 2000 Article
500-year history of Net�s special sign By Philip Willan
THE ubiquitous symbol of the Internet era communications, the @ sign used in email addresses, is actually a 500-year-old invention of Italian merchants, an Italian academic has revealed.
Giorgio Stabile, a professor of the history of science at La Sapienza University, Rome, claims to have stumbled on the earliest known example of the symbol�s use, as an indication of a measure of weight or volume.
He said the @ sign represented an amphora, a measure of capacity based on the terracotta jars used to transport grain and liquid in the ancient Mediterranean world. The first known instance of its use, he said, occurred in a letter written by a Florentine merchant on May 4, 1536.
Sent from Seville to Rome by a trader called Francesco Lapi, the document describes the arrival in Spain of three ships bearing treasure from Latin America.
"There, an amphora of wine, which is 1/13th of a barrel, is worth 70 or 80 ducats," Lapi said, representing the amphora with the now familiar symbol of an "a" wrapped in its own tail.
The Spanish word for the @ sign, arroba, also indicates a weight or measure, which was equivalent, at the end of the 16th century, to 11.3kg (25 lb) or 27.2 litres (six gallons).
"The loop around the �a� is typical of that merchant script." The professor unearthed the ancient symbol in the course of research for a visual history of the 20th century, to be published by the Treccani Encyclopedia.
He said the sign, known to modern Italian cybernauts as la chiocciola (the snail).
500-year history of Net�s special sign By Philip Willan
THE ubiquitous symbol of the Internet era communications, the @ sign used in email addresses, is actually a 500-year-old invention of Italian merchants, an Italian academic has revealed.
Giorgio Stabile, a professor of the history of science at La Sapienza University, Rome, claims to have stumbled on the earliest known example of the symbol�s use, as an indication of a measure of weight or volume.
He said the @ sign represented an amphora, a measure of capacity based on the terracotta jars used to transport grain and liquid in the ancient Mediterranean world. The first known instance of its use, he said, occurred in a letter written by a Florentine merchant on May 4, 1536.
Sent from Seville to Rome by a trader called Francesco Lapi, the document describes the arrival in Spain of three ships bearing treasure from Latin America.
"There, an amphora of wine, which is 1/13th of a barrel, is worth 70 or 80 ducats," Lapi said, representing the amphora with the now familiar symbol of an "a" wrapped in its own tail.
The Spanish word for the @ sign, arroba, also indicates a weight or measure, which was equivalent, at the end of the 16th century, to 11.3kg (25 lb) or 27.2 litres (six gallons).
"The loop around the �a� is typical of that merchant script." The professor unearthed the ancient symbol in the course of research for a visual history of the 20th century, to be published by the Treccani Encyclopedia.
He said the sign, known to modern Italian cybernauts as la chiocciola (the snail).