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Translingual
editEtymology
editA cursive variation of ᾱ or ᾱᾱ, the abbreviation of Greek ἀνά (aná) used in recipes and prescriptions with the meaning "of each", and later extended to accounting. (Other explanations have that it is ā, an abbreviation of Latin ad (“to”), or French à (“to”).)
Symbol
edit@ (English symbol name at sign)
- (computing) The symbol used as a separator between a username and a domain name in an e-mail address ("at" the domain name).
- My e-mail address is psychonaut@example.com.
- At the rate of; per.
- 7 @ $2 = $14 ― seven, at two dollars each, are fourteen dollars
- (computing, IRC) The most common choice of configurable prefix symbol to identify a channel operator.
- (Internet) Prepended to the name of the user to whom a remark is addressed.
- Bob: How can I stop other people from accessing my files when they use my computer?
Jack: @Bob, you need to protect the files with a password.
- (phonetics) A pulse of laughter. (Thus @@@ is the transcription equivalent of ha! ha! ha! or hee! hee! hee! etc. in conventional orthography.)
- (video games) In roguelike games, the player character, conventionally represented by this symbol in character-based interfaces.
- While I was dealing with the hounds, an orc tracker stumbled across @ from the east.
See also
edit- English: at sign
English
editPronunciation
edit- (stressed) enPR: ăt, IPA(key): /æt/ ("at")
Audio (US): (file) - (unstressed) IPA(key): /ət/
- (Northern US, rare) IPA(key): /ˈitʃæt/ ("each at")
- Rhymes: -æt
- Homophone: at
Etymology 1
editPreposition
edit@
- At a rate of (so much each).
- 15 items @ $10
- @ 80 km/h ― at eighty kilometres per hour
- (informal) At (any sense).
- @ 20°C ― at twenty degrees Celsius
- Text message: “im @ school.”
Translations
editVerb
edit@ (third-person singular simple present @s, present participle @ing, simple past and past participle @ed)
- (Internet slang, transitive) To reply to or speak to someone, either online or face to face. (from the practice of targeting a message or reply to someone online by writing @name)
- Honestly, don't @ me if you don't have anything nice to say.
- He angrily @ed me after I made an innocent comment.
- 2023, R. F. Kuang, Yellowface, The Borough Press, page 2:
- She regularly tweets career updates and quirky jokes to her seventy thousand followers, but she rarely @s other people.
- 2024 October 10, Mehera Bonner, “The Levi's Shortalls Taylor Swift Can't Stop Wearing Are Still on Sale Post Prime Day”, in Cosmopolitan[1]:
- "you need to calm down" — my credit card @ me.
Usage notes
edit- Chiefly used in the phrase don't @ me. It can be used humorously when stated after an unpopular or ironic opinion, to forestall dissent.
Alternative forms
editSee also
editEtymology 2
editDue to the fact that The at-sign (@) resembles both the feminine ending/element a and the masculine o.
Symbol
edit@
- Forming gender-neutral versions of Spanish-derived words by replacing both the masculine -o and feminine -a.
- By extension, sometimes used to blend other pairs of words that differ by being spelled with o vs a.
See also
editGerman
editPronunciation
editPreposition
edit@
- (informal, Internet) regarding
- (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought:)
Hebrew
editSymbol
edit@
- (computing) The symbol used as a separator between a username and a domain name in an e-mail address.
Usage notes
editThe symbol is called כְּרוּכִית (krukhit, “strudel; at sign, @”), or sometimes colloquially שְׁטְרוּדֶל (“strudel; at sign, @”).
Hungarian
editSymbol
edit@
- (computing) The symbol used as a separator between a username and a domain name in an e-mail address.
Usage notes
editThe symbol is called kukac (“worm”) in Hungarian because of its shape.
Japanese
editEtymology 1
editSymbol
edit@
- (computing) The symbol used as a separator between a username and a domain name in an e-mail address.
- (Internet slang) used to attach a qualifier to someone's name
- cosMo@暴走P
- cosMo@BōsōP
- cosMo@Bōsō-P
- てさぐれ!部活もの
- ドンチキ田中@イケメン大好き
- Donchiki Tanaka@Ikemen daisuki
- Donchiki Tanaka@I Love Hot Men
- ドンチキ田中@イケメン大好き
- cosMo@暴走P
Usage notes
editThe symbol is called 単価記号 (tankakigō), アットマーク (atto māku), or アット (atto).
Etymology 2
editPronunciation
editParticle
edit- at a rate of
- 500 @ 5円
- gohyaku atto go-en
- 500 items at 5 yen each
- 500 @ 5円
Etymology 3
editPronunciation
editParticle
editEtymology 4
editPronunciation
editParticle
editMalagasy
editPreposition
edit@
- (informal) Abbreviation of amin'ny.
Portuguese
editEtymology 1
editSymbol
edit@
- the symbol for the arroba unit of weight
Etymology 2
editSymbol
edit@
- (now chiefly proscribed) gender-neutral replacement for masculine -o or -e and feminine -a
- @s alun@s = {os alunos, as alunas}
- the students
- est@ usuári@ = {este usuário, esta usuária}
- this user
Usage notes
editRussian
editSymbol
edit@
Usage notes
edit- This symbol is called эт (et), лягу́шка (ljagúška), обезья́нка (obezʹjánka), соба́ка (sobáka), or комме́рческое «эт» (kommérčeskoje «et»).
Serbo-Croatian
editSymbol
edit@
Usage notes
editThe sign has several possible names:
Spanish
editEtymology
editDue to the fact that The at-sign (@) resembles both the feminine ending/element a and the masculine o.
Symbol
edit@
- the symbol for the arroba unit of weight and volume
- (informal) a replacement for o or e and a, to include both masculine and feminine forms
- l@s alumn@s = {los alumnos, las alumnas}
- the students
- est@ usuari@ = {este usuario, esta usuaria}
- this user
- 2000, Onofre Ricardo Contreras Jordán, La formación inicial y permanente del profesor de educación física, Univ de Castilla La Mancha, →ISBN, page 131:
- Deberá el/la tutor/a orientar, reconducir y resolver las mil y una dudas que se plantean l@s alumn@s en el prácticum ya sea I, II o III, en sus diferentes actuaciones docentes, en cuanto a evaluación, niveles de dificultad parámetros que evaluar y un largo etc […]
- The tutor must guide, redirect and resolve the thousand and one doubts that students have in the practicum, whether I, II or III, in their different teaching activities, in terms of evaluation, levels of difficulty, parameters to be evaluated and a broad […]
Swedish
editSymbol
edit@
- (computing) The symbol used as a separator between a username and a domain name in an e-mail address.
Usage notes
editThe symbol is called snabel-a (“elephant's trunk A”) in Swedish because of its shape. Less formally it is also known as kanelbulle (“cinnamon roll”) or alfakrull (“alpha curl”)
Turkish
editSymbol
edit@ (et işareti)
- her biri (“each”)
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