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    One of the 15 questions in this topic

    How much do you know about Linguistics: Curiosities and Origin of Words?

    The '@' symbol, essential for email, has an origin long before the Internet. From what medieval Latin word does its curious Spanish name 'arroba' come?

    Answers

    From 'ad', meaning 'towards'
    From the Greek 'amphora', meaning 'amphora'
    From Arabic 'ar-roub', meaning 'the fourth part'Correct
    From Old Spanish 'arrobar', meaning 'to enthrall'

    The name 'at' for the @ symbol comes from the Hispanic Arabic 'ar-rub', which in turn comes from the classical Arabic 'rub', meaning 'fourth'. In the Middle Ages, it was used as a unit of weight and volume (equivalent to a quarter of a 'quintal', about 11.5 kg). Merchants wrote it as an 'a' surrounded by a curved line, which over time evolved into the current symbol. Ray Tomlinson chose it for email in 1971 because it was a rarely used character that would not cause confusion.