Hi,
In some cases, yes a few laptops do allow you to select @ above the '2' key.
The symbol above the 2 on the English (US) keyboard is the "at" symbol (@). It is commonly used in email addresses to separate the username from the domain name, as well as in various online contexts. To type it, you typically hold down the Shift key and press the 2 key.
To type the "@ symbol," press and hold the Shift key on your keyboard and then press the number 2 key (usually located above the letter Q on most keyboards). This combination will produce the "@" symbol on your screen.
It differs depending on yourregionalkeyboard.UK: Hold shift, press the key that has @ (far right,nextto the large enter key)Canada & US: Hold shift, press the number 2Dutch: Hold shift, press the key that comes before the number 1For a specific answers, re-ask giving an exact country.
The abbreviation for "2 above" is typically "2↑" or "2 abv." The symbol "↑" indicates "above," while "abv" is a common abbreviation for "above."
To type the "therefore" symbol in Microsoft Word follow these steps: 1. Select the Symbol font 2. Hold down Alt key and type 0092 on the numerical keypad
@ It is the symbol above the number 2 on the QWERTY keyboard.
In the "menu" bar at the top of the screen, select "Insert"; then select "symbol"; under the "Font" box, select "Wingdings 2"; in the matrix select the "check mark"; then select "Select" at the bottom of the box and then select "Close" at the bottom of the box.
You use the symbol of "at" on your keyboard. It is on the number 2 key. You will need to hold down the "shift" button with your right pinky finger, while hitting the number 2 key with your left ring finger.
To write the at symbol (@), you can typically find it on your keyboard. On most English keyboards, it’s located above the number 2 key; you can type it by holding down the "Shift" key and pressing "2." On mobile devices, you usually need to switch to the symbols or numeric keyboard to find it. If you're using a different keyboard layout, the method may vary slightly.
The @ symbol is on the "2" key. Hold down "Shift" and press "2".
"Okay, look at the key to the left of the enter key. The top symbol is 2 lines, and the bottom symbol has one line. Hold the shift key down and press that key to begin your quote. Type. Press the key again when you finish your quote." :)
On a PC: If you have an extended keyboard, the \ character should be on the key underneath the Backspace key and next to the key with the ] symbol. If you don't have that keyboard, press and hold down the left Alt key, then on the numeric pad type the numbers 9 and 2 in succession.On a Mac: Most keyboards have the \ character in the same position as PC keyboards. If not, hold down the Shift key, then press and hold the Alt key, and finally press the forward-slash (/) key.On an iPad: If you're using the virtual keyboard, select numeric mode (the "?123" key), then the extended-symbol key ("#+=") to display the keyset containing the \ character.