&

Etymology
A stylized form of. Romans used such symbols (ligatures) from at least the first century, but the character may not have acquired its present form until the advent of calligraphy in the Middle Ages. Compare ⁊, of same meaning and similar derivation.

Conjunction

 * 1) Siglum of "and"

Symbol

 * 1)  Used in some programming languages for different purposes.
 * 2) Dereferencing memory address.
 * 3) Bitwise "and" operator.
 * 4)  In a URL, separates each field-value pair of a query string.
 * https://ingentionary.miraheze.org/w/index.php?title=Wiktionary:Word_of_the_day&action=view&useskin=monobook

Derived terms

 * ⅋
 * v& (to be arrested)
 * v& (to be arrested)

Conjunction

 * 1) Siglum of "and"
 * 2) * 2011,, The True Tale of the Monster Billy Dean, Candlewick Press (2014), ISBN 0763663093, :
 * “Welcum to McCaufreys, Billy Dean” he says. “Make yorself at home & hav a pie.”
 * 1)   in Latin phrases such as .

Translations

 * Catalan:
 * French:
 * German:
 * Greek: ϗ
 * Irish: ⁊
 * Italian: &


 * Malay: &
 * Portuguese:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Thai: