et el, sic, pls sos
et el, sic, pls sos
Guys, Maybe I am doff (no comments pls John Young), but what the hell does et al, and sic mean. These wierd and wonderful abbreviations are used quite abit, and I have no clue.
Sorry for the strange request, but it's buggin me!!!
Sorry for the strange request, but it's buggin me!!!
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And I failed latin...ET AL:
Latin meaning "and others".
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Type define:sic in Google... (very useful if linguistically challenged like yours truly...)





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SICSIC may mean one of the following: *[sic] or (sic) (from Latin sic for "thus"; see also list of Latin phrases) is a bracketed expression used to indicate that an unusual spelling, phrase, or any other preceding quoted material is intended to be read or printed exactly as shown (rather than being an error) and should not be corrected. ...

4 Sale (will trade)
P166S, Jodel, hangar and other odds and sods
Radial - http://tiny.cc/eppqp
Still @ The Coves (Harties) but dream has died
P166S, Jodel, hangar and other odds and sods
Radial - http://tiny.cc/eppqp
Still @ The Coves (Harties) but dream has died
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If internet can't solve/answer it, usually I am stuffed

4 Sale (will trade)
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Radial - http://tiny.cc/eppqp
Still @ The Coves (Harties) but dream has died
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Radial - http://tiny.cc/eppqp
Still @ The Coves (Harties) but dream has died
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Re: et el, sic, pls sos
Et Al = typical KZN phase "and all". Correct use meaning "and others".kb wrote: but what the hell does et al, and sic mean.
(Sic) = as written - usually / mostly meaning as spelt.
Regards
John ZU-CIB
PS: "No comments"




Having recently finished an academic dissertation I am so GAT VOL of abbreviations such as et al. Don't forget that et al. should be in italics otherwise you will have some dingbat professor threatening to fail you.
In research methodology the abbreviation et al. is used when quoting more than one author. So if there are more than two authors to a piece of literature you will quote as follows: Rv4ker et al. (2007) commented........bla, bla, bla
Sorry for boring you okes but I had to find some out let for this bloody academic lingo because no real person ever used it
.

In research methodology the abbreviation et al. is used when quoting more than one author. So if there are more than two authors to a piece of literature you will quote as follows: Rv4ker et al. (2007) commented........bla, bla, bla
Sorry for boring you okes but I had to find some out let for this bloody academic lingo because no real person ever used it

Simon
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It seems they are all scanning old versions of Latin English DictionariesGR8-DAD wrote:What's going on, have we run out of topics or is everyone out there busy flying...

Don't know how many guys have picked up some softness by quoting Carpe Diem or similar words. The language probably died a couple of hundred years ago for a reason.



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Just as a matter of interest, when you see ibid after a reference or somewhere in text this means, 'same as previous'. Often used when you are referring to various things that are all qouted from one source.
When an editor uses [sic] what they are saying is, "I am fully aware that this spelling or usage is incorrect but I am using the words verbatim and it's not my fault that the source is an ignoramus..."
When an editor uses [sic] what they are saying is, "I am fully aware that this spelling or usage is incorrect but I am using the words verbatim and it's not my fault that the source is an ignoramus..."
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