![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjULZ1Ju_I3J-tAfu2Wq5bFM_KQfZJ6zkUdCCWYweDaHpYzjoESUxfifQrcUiIAoJm_Sh2GYtlHcV-6fLN5J8pIYtbZ3kT-qHkxJPopgSLyeBumsBgB3Ux2RU3xAwdJ3pZgyPxhj2nJHY4/s400/At+Symbol.jpg)
“What do you call the curly symbol in the middle of an email address?” asked a slightly dishevelled Italian girl over breakfast in surprisingly crisp English.
It was a strange, almost nerdish opening query in the breakfast room of a cheap hotel and caught me a bit by surprise. Most breakfast conversation in these places tend to be about where you are from, where you have been or are travelling and questions to compare notes about what is worth visiting in the current town.
I responded that we call it “at”.
“I know that, everyone says that, but what is it really called”, she fired back disappointed at my meagre suggestion. She proudly stated “We call it chiocciola which is a snail in English."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxPW9RvGnoQZd1gHzRW-psTdTmrMtzzhBR3s0HXRcB9FD7FtbUzpKT1WFkzjQAIDFeuxediccOvoWzotEh48QttUjcxkyW1mGPOSYAD2-EkMQ1Qd-gZ9oToTcMzkkmefXHA5LzHAihzYs/s200/At+snail.jpg)
It started me into an embarrassing sequence of shameless nerdish breakfast queries over the following days to discover that most languages have far more flamboyant words for the innocent “@” symbol, which has become so prevalent in our life. After all, I wasn’t likely to meet any of these people again so the odd nerdy inquiry seemed pretty safe.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjERinMpiT6HJj24hPNJkyeICxVooHGC6RB_dBJdr3eZdlWAi6iWFT1OaDF7VhQns6hWXRo2VVJS4F7IxHdu2HhrtKn0-_QemCFan5II8HjCYS2hJgbz2e4viyfkCVzBoobygYkl2b_LAU/s200/At+Elephant1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilqQbJL07xyIFNDes0JkKLgsJjCoe2Hs5duVhWeX52M_mnK34x7-l2VbYs4aZJFN_NLzbkmgBQls16PkhhN0ijelkbMMrAjOXDD4X0isDTTWp4OHUSaPvfFiq5A53M_CgZY1gzkgDE1Hg/s200/At+Monkey1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidp-bLJWmLLOnaBYQ2kYP9f-gF60kdy2PPioO8z1EEhPN_zlcMad3FhZsKzCO09c9_35lNEn8C3ZiQQcuPixMFCMh2kL0JtN6mf2UbfL3Yy5csHdIX_7l3Yoni05w5s-ExX9OdvXh2yk8/s200/At+Rollmop1.jpg)
I certainly don’t lose sleep over it but I do wonder why English didn’t manage a more elegant word for this modest but ubiquitous symbol of the electronic age.
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