After the first author's name, type: et al.
In a citation, subsequent authors are typically noted with "et al." after the first author's name. This abbreviation stands for "et alia" in Latin, meaning "and others." It is used to simplify the citation when there are multiple authors.
Use et al. for notation for subsequent multiple authors in a citation.
Use et al. for subsequent multiple authors in citations.
Use et al. for subsequent multiple authors in citations.
That is calle a quote.
et al. (and others).Use et al. after listing the first author only for subsequent multiple authors. Example (Smith, Jones, Taylor & Johnson, 2003); subsequent list would be (Smith et al., 2003).Notation for subsequent multiple authors in a citation is "et al." without the quotation marks.
Subsequent authors of a citation can be noted using "et al." after the first author's name. This abbreviation stands for "et alia" in Latin, meaning "and others." It is used to indicate that there are more authors beyond the ones explicitly mentioned.
Notation for subsequent multiple authors is et al. (the period is required after the al.).
In APA style, subsequent multiple authors in a citation are noted as "et al." after the first author's name. This is used when a work has 3 or more authors but you only list the first author followed by "et al." for subsequent citations.
The answer you're probably looking for is "et al.", short for "et alia", which means "and others."
For multiple subsequent authors use the notation (without quotation marks) "et al.".
et al - this is the answer
The notation is: "et al.".