It depends which email site you're with. Usually they don't allow symbols, though some can. If you're still unsure, try you're luck with the symbol you want and if it doesn't work, then you'll be completely sure.
Symbols are what we use everyday even if we don't know it. You see symbols when you drive, when you're at school and even at home. Symbols make things easier to understand especially when you're reading a map.
Read more: Why_do_we_use_symbols
email address has an "at" symbol @ web address does not.
Computer programmer Ray Tomlinson was the first to integrate the @ symbol on email addresses. He wanted to show the separation between a person's name and email address. This symbol is often referred to as the 'at' symbol.
The @ symbol.
A hostname in an email address appears after the @ symbol, like user@hostname.com. The hostname is always the company or group that handles that email address.
An at symbol is a symbol, @, used to refer to something which is at the rate of a certain value, or as a separator in an email address.
An at symbol is a symbol, @, used to refer to something which is at the rate of a certain value, or as a separator in an email address.
@ It is the symbol above the number 2 on the QWERTY keyboard.
"au" after an email address, e.g. @mail.au means that the domain where that email address is held originates from Australia. It does not mean, however, that the person who holds the address is necessarily from Australia.
The answer is no. An email address is made up of three parts. The first is the email account name. The last part is the mail server. And in between them is the @ symbol.
An at sign is a symbol, @, used to refer to something which is at the rate of a certain value, or as a separator in an email address.
Since the @ symbol is not actually a word, but a symbol used to denote a word, there is no French translation of it. The French word for "at" is "a" but in French, if one is writing an e-mail address, @ would still be used.
i have no email address.