Normally, it's just abbreviation with a double colon afterwards.
Instead of
In example:
I.e.:
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Normally, it's just abbreviation with a double colon afterwards.
Instead of
In example:
I.e.:
FYI, "i.e." comes from the Latin id est, meaning "that is".
"e.g." means "for example", from the Latin exempli gratia.
The meaning is a little different, though the two are often interchanged. You should use "i.e." to clarify a singular meaning (think "in other words...") and use "e.g." to give one of potentially many examples.
See https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/ie-vs-eg-abbreviation-meaning-usage-difference for more examples and explanations.
For English speakers, you can mentally substitute "idiom explained" and "example given" as a mnemonic to help remember the difference.
"idiom explained"
Mischief managed?
My parenthetical seems to have mysteriously vanished!
Good to know. I'm not a native English speaker. I was going for the equivalent of the German "z.B." - "zum Beispiel".
z.B. = e.g.
d.h. = i.e.
I.e. is an abbreviation of the Latin phrase for "in other words". E.g. would be "for example"
I've seen it as an easier to type version of the "therefore" symbol which is three dots in a triangle ∴
The symbol is used in math and logic. Try reading the word "therefore" in place of the symbol and see if it makes sense in context.
I always just thought ∴ meant you were being targeted by Predator.
Can confirm. It was used in the introductory formal logic course when I was at uni.
"R.:" looks like an abbreviated form of "Reply:"/"Response:" but since "History" isn't abbreviated it just looks like a typo to me.
Maybe the period is for abbreviation. In that comment, from a cursory glance, maybe R. means Response.
Am I missing some comments somewhere? All I see are people telling you the difference between the latin ie and eg. Nobody has commented on your query.