Email
in sentence
419 examples of Email in a sentence
When you go on vacation, instead of saying, "This person's on vacation, they'll get back to you eventually," they say, "This person's on vacation, so we've deleted your
email.
This person will never see the
email
you just sent."
But now we chill out on the couch also while updating a Google Doc or replying to
email.
The average person checks
email
74 times a day, and switches tasks on their computer 566 times a day.
So before challenge week, we were averaging two hours a day on our phones and 60 pickups, you know, like, a quick check, did I get a new
email?
Now, these richer brain signatures might be why recruiters from Fortune 500 companies evaluating candidates thought that the candidates were smarter when they heard their voices compared to when they just read their pitches in a text, for example, or an
email
or a letter.
So one day, I was just doing my regular work in Brooklyn, and I got an
email
that said, "Hi, I'm a big fan of your work.
And every time, daily, after we have meeting, what compromise we have, whatever, I go, I write a short email, send it.
By being everywhere, by being accessible and relevant, I hope to make reading a daily habit, as easy and effortless as checking your email, as booking a ticket online or ordering your groceries.
To make this happen, you may remember getting an
email
ahead of time, from TED, asking you whether you would choose to flip the coin or not, if you played the game.
When I came out, I wrote at 10-page encyclopedic document with a zip-file attachment of music and videos that I sent to every single person I came out to. (Laughter) And I kept it in my
email
signature for months afterwards, because you also don't ever stop coming out.
A few years ago, I sent them the following email: "Dear brothers, I hope this message finds you well.
In a few years, I plan to send my brothers the following email: "Dear brothers, I hope this message finds you well.
So if I look at my own job as a CEO, I would say 90 percent of my work is repetitive, I don't enjoy it, I spend about four hours per day on stupid, repetitive
email.
The last time I got an
email
from a journalist saying, "Why do academics hate Wikipedia?"
I sent it from my Harvard
email
address because I was recently appointed a fellow there.
One morning, I'm checking my
email
and I see a story from a mom who said she was in the shower, and her phone was on the counter by the shower, and it said her daughter might need her help.
I think I turned white reading this
email.
In addition, if you were to fold in one of the corners, then you could program the book to actually
email
you the text on the page for your notes.
There's one that actually analyzes the contents of the bowl and transmits the results via
email
to your doctor.
And then I got an
email
from a guy named Bipin Desai.
I was met with a call from my mother, which isn't that out the norm, my mom likes to text, call, email, Facebook, Instagram, all that.
I got this
email
from him two years ago; he said, "I think I've got an answer to some of your questions."
But I succumbed, and I checked my work
email.
But the reason the
email
came was that Jake, at age 32, the horse, had become gravely ill and had to be put down, and this is what was going on.
OK, third rule, and I really mean this one: please do not ask for help over
email
or text.
I realize sometimes there's no alternative, but mostly what happens is, we like to ask for help over
email
and text because it feels less awkward for us to do so.
You know what else feels less awkward over
email
and text?
In-person requests for help are 30 times more likely to get a yes than a request made by
email.
Or, I like to share every time I feel anxious about sending an
email.
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