Carbon copy (people you are copying in) and blind carbon copy (people copied in but without the recipient knowing)
A 'copy' (CC or BCC) notation is used at the end of a letter when a copy of the letter is being sent to one or more other parties.
CC is short for carbon copy. People whose addresses go in the cc field of an e-mail are people who get a copy of the e-mail even though it is not addressed to them. For example, if you are sending an e-mail on someone else's behalf, the person for whom you are sending the e-mail gets a copy. BCC is short for blind carbon copy. The usage is the same as for cc, but the names and addresses in the bcc field are hidden from everyone receiving the e-mail. Before personal computers were available, if you were sending a message in writing and you wanted it to look professional, you used a typewriter. If you wanted to have an extra copy of the letter you were typing, you would put two sheets of paper into the typewriter with a sheet of carbon paper in between. As you typed, ink from the carbon paper would make a copy of your text on the second page, which was called a carbon copy.
cc? it means corny chick.
Yes, you can use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses in the "To," "Cc," or "Bcc" fields. This is especially common in some email clients that recognize semicolons as delimiters for different recipients. However, many email clients also accept commas for this purpose, so it's essential to check the specific requirements of the email service you are using. Overall, both semicolons and commas can be used, but semicolons are less common.
The term cc means carbon copy. Originally it meant a copy that was made with the use of carbon paper. Today there are other, and more efficient ways of copying letters, but we still use the term cc.
BCC stands for Blind Carbon Copy. It is used for sending the same e-mail to lots of people without anyone that receives it knowing who else got it. Clubs or organisations use it as a way of keeping people's e-mails private. Into BCC you put the addresses you want to send e-mails to, just like you would in the TO or CC line.
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 and BCC should be capitalized as they are acronyms for Carbon Copy and Blind Carbon Copy, respectively.
The full form of CC is carbon copy. This is used when sending an email to multiple recipients and you do not wish to hide the other email addresses. BCC stands for blind carbon copy. This is used when you do not want all of the email addresses listed.
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
CC means Carbon Copy
Cute Couple.
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.
using Bcc and cc