주제 내 페이지: < [1 2] | Pronunciation of @ et al. throughout the world 스레드 게시자: Paul Dixon
| Krzysztof Kajetanowicz (X) 폴란드 Local time: 23:49 영어에서 폴란드어 + ...
I'm so glad to be the first Pole here to break the news to you.
We call the @ symbol małpa, which literally means monkey.
Someone, somewhere in our country thought once that the @ symbol looked decidedly like a monkey, sitting on a branch somewhere, sleeping, maybe producing monkey guano. Hence, monkey. Amazingly, it's intuitive enough (to me as well) to have been widely a... See more I'm so glad to be the first Pole here to break the news to you.
We call the @ symbol małpa, which literally means monkey.
Someone, somewhere in our country thought once that the @ symbol looked decidedly like a monkey, sitting on a branch somewhere, sleeping, maybe producing monkey guano. Hence, monkey. Amazingly, it's intuitive enough (to me as well) to have been widely adopted.
Because my own address only has my first name before the @ symbol, spelling it out I sound like I'm introducing myself as "Chris the monkey".
[Edited at 2010-10-02 07:00 GMT] ▲ Collapse | | |
For what it's worth, Greeks perceive this symbol, not as a monkey, or an elephant's trunk, nor even as a dog, but as the head of a cartoon duck (e.g. Donald). The word for that in Greek is papaki (little duck). If you imagine the central a and the space to the right of it as the duck's eyes, and the curl underneath as the beak ... well, you either get it or you don't.
The website papaki.gr is one of the main domain name registrants in Greece.
[Edited at 2010-10-02 09:1... See more For what it's worth, Greeks perceive this symbol, not as a monkey, or an elephant's trunk, nor even as a dog, but as the head of a cartoon duck (e.g. Donald). The word for that in Greek is papaki (little duck). If you imagine the central a and the space to the right of it as the duck's eyes, and the curl underneath as the beak ... well, you either get it or you don't.
The website papaki.gr is one of the main domain name registrants in Greece.
[Edited at 2010-10-02 09:19 GMT] ▲ Collapse | | |
In Serbian colloquial "@" is called "crazy A".
"Yes, yes.. my mail is... 'example', then 'crazy a', 'gmail full stop com'" | | | XXXphxxx (X) 영국 Local time: 22:49 포르투갈어에서 영어 + ...
'Arobase' but also increasingly 'at'. | |
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@ in Italian | Jan 30, 2012 |
Marie-Hélène Hayles wrote:
they say chiocciola (kee-OTCH-ola, more or less), which means "snail" - also very appropriate.
So [email protected] would be a (like hat) b chee chiociolla d e (like egg) eff-eh (long f, two syllables) punto eat (pronounced as short as possible) or punto ee t - some people pronounce the it as one word, some as separate letters.
Actually, the Italian sound [a] is different from the sound in hat, which is pronounced /'haet/. Also, to make things clearer for an English speaker, the first sound of chiocciola is /k/ (as in count), not the sound in church. | | | 주제 내 페이지: < [1 2] | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Pronunciation of @ et al. throughout the world Trados Studio 2022 Freelance | The leading translation software used by over 270,000 translators.
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