Et al. is the abbreviation for the Latin phrase et alii which literally means "and the others".
"Et al" means "and others" in latin.
If it is CT et al, it means CT and others. This is a Latin abbreviation.
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."
pierogi 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'
and others - et alia
"Et al" in a trust title stands for "et alii" which is a Latin term meaning "and others." It is used when there are multiple beneficiaries named in the trust document, but not all of their names are listed in the title.
The Latin abbreviation et al., pronounced "and others," is proper in legal documents.
The proper way to type the Latin phrase is et al. The two words are italicized, and a period comes after the second word in the phrase. The phrase is an abbreviated way of saying 'et alia', which means 'and others'.
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.
The phrase et al. (note the spelling) is taken from Latin and often appears in scientific papers. It appears after the name of an author and literally means "and others".