You use inter alia, meaning `among other things', when you want to say that there are other things involved apart from the one you are mentioning. a collector who had, inter alia, 900 engraved gems, 59 marble busts, and over 2,500 coins and medals. among other things
Latin: "among other things", "for example" or "including" Legal drafters would use it to precede a list of examples or samples covered by a more general descriptive statement Sometimes they use an inter alia list to make absolutely sure that users of the document understand that the general description covers a certain element (which was covered in the general description anyway) without, in any way, restricting the scope of the general element to include other things that were not singled out in the inter alia list
among other things; "the committee recommended, inter alia, that he be promoted"