no,
Et Al. is legal jargon for Etc.
It is the abbreviation of the Latin phrase et alia meaning 'and others'
"Et al." is pronounced as "et al-ee."
No, there is not a period after et, rather, the period is after al. Et al. is Latin for et alli, meaning "and other people."
No, "et al." does not have a period.
This Et Al ended in 2008.
This Et Al was created in 2002.
Et ux et al means "the wife and all of the others"
The keyword "et al" is plural.
Yes, there is a period after "et al." in citations.
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.
Melanophages are macrophages which have ingested (endocytosis) melanosomes or melanin. (Weiss et al, 1988; James et al, 1987; Cooper et al, 1986)
Jorg et al Eberhard has written: 'Jorg Eberhard, Christine Glaser, Julius Kaesdorf et al'
Et al. is the abbreviation for the Latin phrase et alii which literally means "and the others".