You capitalize proper nouns.
you capitalize it when you use it like (Mi Mama)
Yes, always capitalize a title.
You can capitalize Japanese and Cherry but not tree
No, there is no need to capitalize 'nun' or 'nuns' in a sentence.
CC = Carbon Copy BCC = Bind Carbon Copy The BCC means that the others on the message TO and CC lines won't know you sent it to the people on the BCC line. CC just means that you want to send a copy to that person - it's nearly identical to the TO line.
the notes are e d c b cc e d c b cc bcc bcc bcc fedb cc bcc bcc fedb e d c b cc e d c b cc
CC - Carbon Copy BCC - Blind Carbon Copy
CC is carbon copy which is the exact same thing as the original email and BCC is blind carbon copy which means they cannot see the people it was sent to.
Hostos and BCC
I believe you mean BCC, it stands for Blind Carbon Copy. When the recipients are in the BCC field, they can't see the other recipients.Addendum:The above is pretty close to being correct. CC (and the CC of BCC) actually stands for the plural "copies," just as the doubled letter "pp" in a source reference stands for "pages." Also, it is the BCC recipients whose names are not seen by anyone else; the CC recipients can be seen.
Carbon Copy BCC = Blind Carbon Copy
using Bcc and cc
CC is short for carbon copy. BCC is short for blind carbon copy.The reason BCC is called a "blind" carbon copy is that, as opposed to CC, BCC recipients of an email are not indicated to anyone, including other BCC recipients.Therefore, if you send an email to person A, with person B and C in CC and person D and E in BCC, person B will see that the email was sent to person A, B, and C, but will not see D or E's names.Likewise, neither person D nor E sees each other's names on the recipient list.The manual that I read said that BCC is good for "secret guests" of a party.
A BCC (blind carbon copy) is a copy of an email message sent to a recipient whose email address does not appear in the message. This is in contrast to To and CC recipients, whose addresses do appear in the respective header lines. Every recipient of the message can see all the To and CC recipients, but does not know about BCC recipients.
Cc stands for carbon copy. It identifies a person who will receive a copy of the email AND whose name will be revealed to other receipients Bcc stands for blind carbon copy. The person will receive a copy of the email but their name will not be revealed to other receipients
If you send or receive email on a company computer then it is only wise to assume that the network administrator can read any of them, whether "to", "cc", "bcc" or "from" you.