1.In Italian, the symbol is informally called the "snail" (chiocciola); its French name is "arobase" or sometimes "arrobe" or "arobe" (from the arroba, an old Spanish and Portuguese unit of weight); in Dutch it is called the "(little) monkey-tail" (apenstaartje); in Hebrew, it is informally called Strudel ("שטרודל"); in Japanese it is the "at mark", and similarly, in German it is called the "at symbol" or "spider monkey" (Klammeraffe); and in Chinese, it is known as the "little mouse". In Spanish and Portuguese it is the symbol for arroba,
an archaic unit of weight, and in some Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking
countries it is still pronounced this way, even when related to an
email address.
what am i talking about ?
clue : (related to an
email address)
Answer :
1. @ sign !