ET phone home!
Italy is the country from which the phrase 'et al' originates. The phrase is an abbreviation for 'et alia', which means 'and others'. That phrase is in Latin, which is the classical language of the ancient Roman Empire.
et cetera[et and + cetera the other (things)]
The phrase Et benedicite nomini ejus means "And bless His name."
Et vous? [formal]Et toi? [informal]
Et cetera
"And to do" or "and to make" may be English equivalents of the French phrase et faire.Specifically, the conjunction et means "and." The infinitive faire means "to do, to make." The pronunciation will be "et fehr" in French.
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 toi? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "How about you?"Specifically, the conjunction et means "and." The personal pronoun toi means "(informal singular) you." The pronunciation is "et twah."
"Du et montro" is not a German phrase.
"Et estim" is the phrase for "I love you" in Catalan.
Both noble and true.
"Fidelum" means "of the faithful" and "et" means "and". So "fidelum et" means "and of the faithful".