How do you say @ in your language? 🤔

We’ll go first:
🇳🇴 Krøllalfa
🇮🇸 Att-merki

Call It Arroba, Kukac or Strudel: The History of the @ Sign

The @ sign is so much a part of the internet that it may surprise you to know it's been around for at least 1,500 years.

HowStuffWorks
@Vivaldi

​ Apenstaartje (monkey's tail)
@Vivaldi 🇷🇴 Coadă de maimuță (monkey's tail) or arond
@Vivaldi dog. For some reason. Or to be a lil more precise, a little doggy. Sobachka
@Vivaldi
🇸🇪 - Snabel-a (lit. "trunk-a" since ot looks a bit like an elephant.)
@Vivaldi 🇮🇹 chiocciola, 🇪🇸 arroba, 🇹🇷 et işareti (‘et’ pronounced like “at” in English)
@Vivaldi Apenstaartje 🇧🇪
@Vivaldi Shocked! Living just on the other side of the Swedish-Norwegian border, I’ve for years thought you said ”alfakrøll”!
@Vivaldi 🇯🇵 In Japanese, @ is アットマーク(Atto māku).
@Vivaldi 🇵🇱 małpa (which means "monkey" 🐒)
@Vivaldi أروباسك 🇲🇦
@Vivaldi
🇭🇺 kukac (means worm in Hungarian)
@Vivaldi 🇮🇹 'chiocciola', which translates as 'snail' because it kind of looks like a snail shell... 🐌
@Vivaldi In the 🇺🇸 it's just "at".
@Vivaldi

🇷🇺 собака [so-ba-ka] -- a dog
@Vivaldi 🇦🇹 Klammeraffe
@Vivaldi 🇹🇼 小老鼠 (little mouse)