CC comes from Carbon Copy, and old way of making a copy of a typed letter, and it sends a copy of your e-mail to any addresses you list there. If you use BCC, it also sends a copy, but no recipient can see who else received it, unlike CC.
CC(Carbon Copy) is just another recipient to be sent a copy of the email. When you send an email with an email in the 'To' field and an email in the 'CC' field, the person in the 'To' field can see who was in the CC feild, although if you use BCC (Blind Carbon Copy), they can't.
cc=carbon copy bcc= blind carbon copy. use these when sending to multiple addresses
Cc stands for Carbon copy and means you can send an exact copy of the email you are sending to someone else you only need to use it if you wish to send a copy of that email to another person. If you send a copy using Cc the person you are originally sending the email to will know who you sent a copy to.
If you receive an email with Cc listed at the top of an email followed by your email address that means you have been sent a copy of an email which was originally sent to someone else. If you receive an email with Cc listed at the top of an email follwed by someone elses email address that means a copy of the email which was sent to you was also sent to someone else, being the address beside Cc.
Carbon Copy
From Email? :Carbon Copy
Look for the BCC ("Blind Carbon Copy") key in your outgoing email...
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.
CC means Carbon Copy and it will send the same email to the person in the CC box. Anyone you send the email to can see this so if you want to make sure no one can see who you send the copy to then use BBC.
You should write your own email
cc
There is an option of CC in the compose mail. CC stands for Carbon Copy in mail terminology. It means the CC person would also receive the email.