If you mean ET, as in the film and alien, then it means Extra Terrestrial :) COS HES GOT LITTLE LEGS!
either E-ka-Loo(the oo hoo hoo that owls make with out the h)-Et(long E) or i-kal (short a)-oo(owl sound again, no h though)-et(short e)
et is French for "and".
"Et cetera," often abbreviated as "etc." or "&c." has two accepted pronunciations: "et-SET-er-uh," or "et-SET-ruh."
et j'espère: and I hope
"et de" means "and of".
et sequences (et seq for short)
et
No. The E is indeed short in nest (as in net and rest), but in blanket you do not sound the ET as "et" -- it has a short I sound (blang-kit).
and short .
it means, "Et cetera".
The most common English pronunciation is with short E and short I, followed by either. [ET-ih-ket] or ET-ih-kit] In some dialects, the T is softened and the "et" sounds more like "ed."
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".
The phrase 'et alors' means and so?, andso what?, or so what? In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'et' means 'and'. And the adverb 'alors' means 'in a short while, then'.
The answer you're probably looking for is "et al.", short for "et alia", which means "and others."
It has to do with the French language. It also has to do with long and short vowels. The suffix et is French and ballet is a french sport. Also if you put an a at the end it would make a short a, as in apple. so it would not be the same. You can look up the suffix et at wikipedia.
It is short for 'et cetera', which is Latin for 'and so on'.
^ il est court et drole