Et al or et als means and other person(s). It is used when there are multiple owners of a property and only one owner's name is mentioned. It is often used when identifying abutters in a deed description. For example, when the abutting land is owned by Charles Nelson, Brian Reilly and Nathan Quigley the property description might say "bounded on the north by land of Charles Nelson et als".
Can you give me some more details as to what exactly you mean, i.e. do you want to know how to find out if there is a mortgage on the property? Can you give me some more details as to what exactly you mean, i.e. do you want to know how to find out if there is a mortgage on the property?
corporation or limited corporation
ppm means Parts per million
Yes it does, Only after you refinance the property may you take the cosigners name of the mortgage loan.
It means being 'solvent' - or having money or valuable property
Generally, the term "et al" in the context of a lawsuit, stands for "and others". It is normally seen accompanying a party's name, e.g., Smith Jones, et al.,
"TR ET AL" on a property deed typically stands for "Trustee" and "et al." (which is short for "et alia," meaning "and others"). This designation indicates that the property is held in trust, with the trustee managing it on behalf of other beneficiaries or parties involved. It signifies that there may be multiple individuals or entities associated with the ownership or management of the property.
Et al. is the abbreviation for the Latin phrase et alii which literally means "and the others".
"Et al" means "and others" in latin.
Normally, yes, when there is no will.
pierogi and others
Et al means "and others." In crossword puzzles, et al. indicates that the answer will be a plural. It tells you to write the group that includes all of the things listed. So bananas, apples, oranges, et al. might have the answer "fruit" or "fruits." If the clues were FDR, JFK, et al, you might say "dems."
When computers first started to be used for property tax collections, memory capacity was a problem (remember Y2K because 2-digit year references were made instead of 4-digit?). Et al. is an abbreviated term for Latin meaning "and others." For example, if the property owners were John Smith and Mary Smith, the property tax bill may say Smith, John et al. (ETALS is incorrect as et al. is already plural). Most assessment and tax offices have made it a practice to gradually update their records as properties are sold to write out the ownership, with perhaps using et al. after listing for first two owners cited on the deed of ownership.
"Et al." is pronounced as "et al-ee."
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."
No, "et al." does not have a period.