From the DOT but the car lot will have been the one to send it to the DOT. The Dot are the ones who actually mail the tittles to you.
He did, but he also received a lot of hate mail.
From infected websites and through emails. Virus are usually in programmes that you have to run, like .exe and .scr files.
You can find Kelloggs cereal coupons online at www.kelloggs.com. If you sign up for their e-mail alert on that website you can get a lot of cereal coupons sent to your inbox.
someone who as a lot to say but what they say has little content
No
yes you can they mail a lot of stuff
This is a typical case of e-mail address spoofing. There is nothing you can do about it, some spammer forged the header and made it look as if you sent the e-mail. The spammer don't even need access to your e-mail account, spoofs like these are mostly done outside the e-mail system of the spoofed victim. If your e-mail address is spoofed a lot, you will receive a lot of bounce backs to e-mails that you did not send.
Zachary Taylor was the one. Mail was often sent with the receiver expected to pay the postage. Taylor got a lot a mail that he did not want to pay the postage to see and he was not at the convention that nominated him.
Mail there is somewhat inconsistent. I have sent things parcel post with the greatest consistency, and sent things Priority that took a lot longer.
a hell of a lot
"Reply" is a response only to the person who sent you the email. "Reply all" or "Reply to all" sends your reply not only to the person who sent you the email but also to everyone else who received the same email that you did. In other words: "A" sends email to "B", "C", "D", "E" and "F". If "B" responds to "A", "B's" response will also be sent to C, D, E and F. Ideal for conversations where everyone on the list needs to see the reply, but something you would not want to use for most email as the effect is to fill a lot of mail boxes with a lot of irrelevant mail.