Helena
How do you call the @ character in your language? In Polish it's called 'małpa' (a monkey) and in Russian 'собака' (a dog). I believe that the name in your language is also funny :-)
2008年4月13日 20:23
回答 · 9
1
Wow, this is very insteresting question! ^_^ In Korean it is called golbaeng-i (골뱅이; bai top shells), a dialectal form of daseulgi (다슬기), a small freshwater snail with no tentacles. [ from wikipedia ] Because, we Korean think, '@' looks like it.
2008年4月23日
1
in japanese, "@" is called "アットマーク" (Pronunciation : atmark). Its same with English pronunciation.
2008年4月14日
1
Well, the official name is "Commercial at", but it's also called "at mark" or simply "at sign". I hope that helps, unfortunately we don't have any cooler names for it;)
2008年4月13日
in hebrew we call @ - strudel, you know, like the pastry ,because it resembles the wrapped up dough of the pastry... but if you want to speak proper hebrew, like a geek, without using foreign words, you'll say כרוכית , kruchit, which is the hebrew name for strudel. karuch-כרוך- means wrapped up. that's it... love those kind of questions! jonie.
2008年4月24日
suru on japanese my first lesson. i sometimes people on japan live on the planet of the apes.u can't understand them. it scares me.civilization says we belong to apes.inner universe.the variant of apes.huh?!feel funny on the lesson, tough.
2008年4月24日
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