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e-mails

n. (plural of e-mail English)

Usage examples of "e-mails".

He knew it was from her without looking: Somewhere in her spiritual blunderings, Brytanni had acquired the unholy power to make her letters, her e-mails, and her faxes all smell like strawberry incense.

She never had been much good with face-to-face business meetings, preferring the anonymity of e-mails, faxes, phone calls and, in a pinch, the old-fashioned letter.

Moreover, using programs like this only highlighted his e-mails for whichever watcher programs were being used by the National Security Agency, British Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), and French Director General Security Exterior (DGSE).

Jack's university German was good enough to read the guy's e-mails, but they didn't reveal very much.

All in all, it used up vast amounts of storage space, and as a result delivery trucks were constantly bringing new disk storage devices to Fort Meade, Maryland, where they were hooked up to the mainframe computers so that if a target person was identified, then his e-mails dating back for months or even years could be screened.

The e-mails he downloaded and saved, and then he logged off, having been on line a mere fifteen seconds, another security measure they'd all been briefed on.

The overwhelming majority of it was so routine it was like e-mails between a husband and wife over what to pick up at the Safeway on the way home from work.

Some of those e-mails could easily be coded messages of significant import, but there was no telling that without a program or crib sheet.

There were no specifics about what he'd done, how he'd been trained, how capable he was, or whether or not he was known to carry a gun, all of which was information he'd like to see, but after reading the decrypted e-mails he re-encrypted them and saved them in his ACTION folder to go over with Brian and Dom.

All his e-mails were encrypted on the best such program there was, individually keyed to his own computer, and therefore beyond anyone's capacity to read except himself.

I switched from fretting about Tom, to wondering if I could safely boot my laptop and read his e-mails, to worrying about Arch.

I sighed, rode a wave of caffeine-craving, and opened the first of the e-mails from "The Gambler," Andy Balachek himself.

I also downloaded Andy's e-mails, because I thought it might help figure out who shot the two of you.

You not only read my personal, private e-mails from Andy Balachek, you also read my personal, private electronic correspondence from and about Sara Beth?

Jack's university German was good enough to read the guy's e-mails, but they didn't reĀ­veal very much.