The Latin phrase meaning "and so on" or "and the rest [of them]" is spelled "et cetera" (two words). The full spelling is rare, and it's much more commonly abbreviated "etc."
The phrase meaning "and the rest", translated from Latin, can either be spelt et cetera (as two words) or etcetera (as a single word).
You spell it "Etcetera", for the latin meaning "The rest or The others".
The term is spelled et cetera, and is usually written etc. with a comma before it.It means 'and so on'.
etcetera Etcetera, or in other words: And so on.
The word is etcetera. Etcetera is used at the end of a list to indicate that further, similar items are included. The abbreviation for etcetera is etc.
Etcetera or Et cetera, could be one word or two.
Etcetera
You spell it "Etcetera", for the latin meaning "The rest or The others".
It is spelled "etcetera".
The abbreviation is "weren't. Here is an example in a sentence -- "Mitch Longley and Deanie Etcetera just weren't meant to be."
That would be the King of Siam as portrayed by Yul Brynner in The King and I.
The term is spelled et cetera, and is usually written etc. with a comma before it.It means 'and so on'.
Stenoptilia etcetera was created in 1998.
Etcetera - cat - was created in 1981.
etcetera Etcetera, or in other words: And so on.
A few ways: Just what you did, "100 spell". OR: "one hundred spell". If you are asking how to spell 100 then O-N-E -- H U N D R E D ! Here is a sentence to illustrate: Deanie Etcetera wrote her beloved, Mitch Longley, one hundred letters.
The word is etcetera. Etcetera is used at the end of a list to indicate that further, similar items are included. The abbreviation for etcetera is etc.
Etcetera - 2008 was released on: USA: 19 March 2008