Et al means "and others" or it can mean "and elsewhere." When used in citing a reference it often means there are multiple authors of the work cited and the citation is for the first author and the others. John Smith, et al would mean John Smith and his coauthors.
others...
If it is CT et al, it means CT and others. This is a Latin abbreviation.
Cllr, Coun, Clr or Cr
BLR IS the abbreviation.
None. But it is the abbreviation of Alberta, a Canadian province.
The abbreviation CMTS can stand for many things. Typically, the abbreviation CMTS stands for Cable Modem Termination System or Computerized Maintenance Test System.
Definitely! "et al." is an abbreviation of "et alli". "et" is a complete word hence no full-stop is required BUT "al." is an abbreviation of "alli" hence a full stop is required.
Et al
Et al. is an abbreviation for the Latin phrase et alii, which means "and others". Since al. is an abbreviation, it is properly spelled with a period/full stop.
"Et al" means "and others" in latin.
The standard abbreviation for multiple authors in a citation is "et al." which is short for the Latin term "et alii" meaning "and others."
It is short for the Latin et alii ('and others'), which means "and others." For example, the phrase "IBM, Microsoft, HP, et al." means "IBM, Microsoft, HP and others" or "Carruthers et al."- "Carruthers and others".
no, Et Al. is legal jargon for Etc. It is the abbreviation of the Latin phrase et alia meaning 'and others'
Et al. is the abbreviation for the Latin phrase et alii which literally means "and the others".
The Latin abbreviation et al., pronounced "and others," is proper in legal documents.
If it is CT et al, it means CT and others. This is a Latin abbreviation.
Yes, the abbreviation "et al." should be italicized in academic writing to indicate that it is a foreign term. This helps to differentiate it from the rest of the text.
In APA style, for citing a work with three or more authors in-text, the first citation would include all authors followed by "et al." For example: (Smith, Jones, Brown, et al., 2021). Subsequent citations of the same work can then use "et al." from the first citation onwards.