So I'm wandering in some random silly pages,
notice a picture of a foreign magazine, Italian possibly,
on the cover of which, an ampersand (&) symbol is used.
Which led me to wonder how "many languages use this symbol?,
but the first question has to be "where did the ampersand come from?" ....
An ampersand (&) is a logogram representing the word logical conjunction "and". The symbol is a ligature of the letters in et, which is Latin for "and". It was traditionally regarded as the last character of the English alphabet.
The name derives from the phrase "and per se and", meaning "and [the symbol which] by itself [is] and". The Scottish English name for the ampersand is epershand, derived from "et per se and" with the same meaning.
So, we conclude that as it is Latin in origin, it would stand to reason that it would be in use in most European languages.
Addionally, the phrase
et cetera can be appreviated to &c, as the ampersand originally stood for the Latin
et.
Crap, I just learned something on a lazy day off,
that has to have violated some rule.