/ˈiːmeɪl/, /ˈiˌmeɪl/
OriginThe noun is an abbreviation of electronic mail. First attested in the 1970s. The verb is derived from the noun, by analogy with mail (“to send through the mail”).
- uncountableA system for sending messages and datas by means of a computer network, primarily the Internet, using the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol and the Internet Message Format.
“He sent me his details via email.”
“The advent of email has simultaneously brought our society closer together and farther apart.”
“Please stop sending me “constructive criticisms” via email, or telling me that “ I feel you are being defensive”, especially just after I have told you “you’re loved”. “Rewards” like that are horrible”
- uncountableThe quantity of messages sent through an email system.
“I am searching through my old email.”
“My inbox used to allow only 50 MB of email at a time until last year, when they upgraded it to 2 GBs!”
- countableA message being sent through email.
“He sent me an email last week to remind me about the meeting.”
“I archive my old emails using a cloud-based service.”
- countable, informalAn email address.
“What’s your email?”
“In this system, your username is your email.”
“Don’t send personal messages to my work email.”
- obsolete, rareEnamel (“an opaque, glossy coating”).
“Set Naples courser to an asse, / Fine emerawde vnto greene glasse: / Set rich rubye to redd emayle, / The raven's plume to peacocke's tayle: / [...] / There shall no less an oddes be seene, / In myne ”
“It is reported, that the Pope long ſince gaue them [the people of Iceland] a diſpenſation to receiue the Sacrament in ale, inſomuch as for their vnceſſant froſts there, no wine but was turned to red e”
“Another part of this Earth being mixt with an equal part of its Salt, and put on the Fire to melt, in part pierc'd thro the Crucible, which was found on the outside, as it were, lin'd with a Brown Ema”
- transitiveTo send an email or emails to.
“She emailed me last week, asking about the status of the project.”
- ditransitive, transitiveTo send (data) through email.
“I’ll email you the link.”
“He emailed the file out to everyone.”
- intransitiveTo send, or compose and then send, one or more emails.
“Most teenagers seem to spend almost the whole day emailing and surfing the Web.”
Formsemails(plural) · e-mail(alternative) · emails(present, singular, third-person) · emailing(participle, present) · emailed(participle, past) · emailed(past) · emayle(alternative)