"Et cetera," often abbreviated as "etc." or "&c." has two accepted pronunciations: "et-SET-er-uh," or "et-SET-ruh."
arivaderchi - goodbye, farewell, bye-bye, et cetera...et cetera...
You spell it: Et cetera :)
etc. is spelled et cetera
Perchance I might inquire as to ... (et cetera)
'Etc.' or 'et cetera,' is Latin. It means, "and the rest." 'Etc.' IS plural.
Tow Nakazaki has written: 'Et Cetera 3 (Et Cetera)' 'Et Cetera 8 (Et Cetera)' 'Et Cetera Volume 4 (Et Cetera)' 'Et Cetera Volume 8 (Et Cetera)' 'Et Cetera 4 (Et Cetera)' 'Et Cetera 7 (Et Cetera)'
The King and I
The abbreviation for et-cetera is etc.
The phrase is "et cetera". It means "and the rest", or "and so on".
et cetera[et and + cetera the other (things)]
Et Cetera - song - was created in 2008.
Et cetera from the Latin et (and) cetera (the rest, the others).
Proper etiquette was to not show skin if you were a woman, to eat with a fork, et cetera
Ect. etc. is the proper abbreviation of et cetera. For those who remain doubtful, please examine the proper spelling of the full version and note that the abbreviation is simply the first three letters, the most common method of abbreviating. The "Ect." answer is simply wrong, though it is very common. It is based on a very common misspelling of et cetera. Abbreviations are not created by re-ordering the letters of the original.
arivaderchi - goodbye, farewell, bye-bye, et cetera...et cetera...
I could tell you if you told me the Latin words.
et cetera simply means "and so on". Maths is not really related to "and so on".