You cant change it. You'll have to create a new account
You can change any information about your Gmail account. The information is the one posted at the time of registration. The information is present in the settings.
You cannot change the email account once created by Gmail. Gmail addresses are known for uniqueness. They cannot be changed later on as it will not be unique.
Sadly, you cant! :(
an email address that is not your main one, but a back up. like Gmail.
An Email ID is a unique identification for an account. A account is linked with this email ID. The .gmail.com is the identification of it.
Hotmail or gmail. i dont know. hotmail is old and gmail is pretty new. to register for gmail you have to be 13 or above, but for hotmail you can register even if you are ten. to contact me please email me at mohagamer@hotmail.com
go to gmail com. Enter your Google Account email address or phone number a
You cannot get the email ID of people just like that. If the person is in your contact, you have to ask them. Email id is the only way to keep in contact via Gmail.
Gmail is not a social networking website. You cannot look at other's profiles easily. Thus you have to find the email ID to contact them.
You can change back to the old Email easily. The old email was the basic HTML one. You can configure it in the settings.
Yes, your email address will change. Each Email address has a particular account. Thus duplication is not possible here.
Yes because the account is no longer existing.
Contact Information - You can update you User ID contact information (name, address, phone, etc...)
The gmail phisher is an attempt to gain private information by masquerading as a request from gmail asking you for your account information. Though the request will appear to be from gmail it is in fact not and any information gained from you can potentially be used in identity theft. No matter how much you trust an email source never click on a link in an email asking for account information. If you think the request is legitimate go directly to the site itself, log in and see if they are, in fact, requesting and updated information from you.