Funny how # is used in some programming/scripting languages to ignore stuff…but on twitter to pay attention to stuff
The symbol # is a “hash”. The “tag” Is the word that follows.
The hash exists as a signal to a computer program indexing posts by topic that the following characters before the next whitespace are meant to signify a tagging of a topic. Twitter started doing this a long time ago, to give users a way to categorize their posts by topic without needing a separate interface. (Did you know that the original 140 character tweet length was so it could fit in a single SMS message? Twitter used to be operable over text message). It’s likely that the # symbol was chosen because in URLs it’s used to signify a page anchor in HTML documents, such as a specific header or paragraph, and so similarly here it’s used to find specific topics; you’re anchoring your interest to something specific.
So it’s not a “hashtag” without the hash and the tag. #TIL
So it’s not a “hashtag” without the hash and the tag. #TIL
Technically, yes. Practically, I don’t think this is true. If you ask 100 people under 20 what “#” is called, 99 or 100 will say it’s a hashtag. Language shifts, and that’s becoming the common name for it, even without it tagging something.
🌈⭐️ the more you know.
What are you talking about, the octothorpe?
https://snomoto.com/the-octothorpe-why-we-stopped-calling-it-a-hashtag-and-why-it-matters-1bol
You just wanted to say ‘pound Taylor Swift’, didn’t you?
I always called it the number sign.
Contemporary to hashtags being invented on Twitter was the use of tags to categorize blog posts. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy
Also, note that hashtags on Twitter started as a grassroots convention before it was supported as an official feature.
On a Touch Tone phone, this is called the Pound Sign (US).
It was pound sign to me and the first time I heard hashtag was people describing twitter things which I never got into.
When I was a kid, the * key was “squishbug”. Why did that change
Buttholes became more fashionable
This was a joke question. The definition of “pound” as used in the context of OP’s question is newer than the definition of “#” as “hash”.
Octothorpe for life.
IIRC Twitter introduced using # to make words searchable across all of the tweets, hence the name.
It had potential to be a great way to index and find things based on key terms. The flaw was letting the normies use it.
I’m looking for an #apple #iPhone that comes in #orange #project16april2026 #all #frontpage #fyp #hot #ok #sale #android
Exactly that kind of shit lol
I grew up with # being pound as well. The use of the pound symbol to highlight shit came from coding. Hash is another word for the pound symbol. It tags stuff. Ergo hashtag. Born in the glory years of Twitter.
£ - pound.
# - hash.
As far as I’m concerned (30s, UK) is always been that?
I think this is a common language divided by an ocean thing.
To expand on what others are saying.
Hash is one of the many names for #. Twitter and other platforms allowed you to use hash to tag your posts with a searchable keyword. Hence “hash tag” which gets shortened to hashtag.
People on these platforms may have had cause to use and think about # on a much larger scale than would’ve been common at that time. Sure you may be asked to press pound on a phonecall once in a while, but that never happened often enough that I could fully keep it straight from star. It was usually just stored in my head as “the special phone key that isn’t star”
I think it was always called a hash but we read it as pound or number…7# or #7. Like how we say ‘and’ instead of saying ampersand.
Ampersand is such a fun word
I’d argue that “and” is the proper way to say “&” in english, even though it’s just a fancy “et”. The word ampersand is just a weird spelling of “and per se and”, that is, “and in itself”, as opposed to being part of listing things. Like: x,y,z, and &. The first and is just part of the grammar of listing things, the second is an item in that list.
…or ‘at’ instead of arobase.
Back in my day if someone said hash you knew you were in for a good time
Dude. I invited a coworker over for happy hour awhile back. She arrived after everyone else had left. I showed her a jar of hash i made. I didn’t know she would take a bite of it. We had a couple bottles of champagne. Shit got weird and she called her husband for a ride home about 2am.












