English edit

Etymology edit

e- +‎ address

Noun edit

e-address (plural e-addresses)

  1. E-mail address.
    • 1985 February 28, Mark Brader, “Duplicate site name "gandalf"”, in net.news.config[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2018-02-04, message-ID <lsuc.455>:
      I've mailed a copy of this to uucpmap and both #E addresses. (I don't have a clean path to the AT&T gandalf; I'm trying ihnp4.)
    • 1986 January 19, W R Somsky, “pupthy - princeton university physics theory”, in net.news.newsite[2] (Usenet), retrieved 2018-02-04, message-ID <22@pupthy.UUCP>:
      #E-Address pupthy!wrs
    • 1986 February 5, Matt Crawford, “Another diplomacy game begins”, in net.games.pbm[3] (Usenet), retrieved 2018-02-04, message-ID <1157@oddjob.UUCP>:
      To the five who were not selected I have sent a list of each other's names and e-addresses so that they can more easily solicit two more players and a GM.
    • 1986 August 31, Andy Gaynor, “Re: Build a Better MouseTrap”, in talk.bizarre[4] (Usenet), retrieved 2018-02-04, message-ID <topaz.5638>:
      e-address: ...!topaz!gaynor
    • 1986 September 11, Anand Sivaramakrishnan, “Valerie Polichar's e-address”, in net.poems[5] (Usenet), retrieved 2018-02-04, message-ID <1246@utastro.UUCP>:
      [Subject: Valerie Polichar's e-address] I tried to mail you a letter, but I couldn't figure out how to get it to you. It got returned.