Diamond Enthusiast

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Webster's signs and symbols table also gives it as at, but also offers each. No hifalutin term there either.
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Diamond Enthusiast

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In British English, the only names for this mark are 'the at sign/symbol' or, sometimes, 'the commercial at sign/symbol'. It has the latter name because it is most often used in business in sentences such as: "14 items @ £12.50 = £175.00. There simply is no other name in this language. I understood the French called it an 'arobase', but - arobase/aerobole - that's of little use to you unless you live in France or Quebec! The Dutch, apparently, call it a monkey's tail! However, I guess you're not in Holland either.
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