It completely depends on the person, the business, and the circumstance... for instance, vacation, or the day of a deadline... whatever is happening. Sometimes we leave our email on all day on a separate screen and answer it as it comes in. Sometimes, if our jobs are less human-centric, we might just check it once a day. If we're on vacation, sometimes we won't check it at all for weeks. And that is only the checking. The responding is a complete other story... you might see an email and never respond to it, or respond to it immediately, depending on who it is, what they are asking, what the politics behind the whole thing are, etc.
if your using the program as your expecting an email, then the email will be "hidden" although depending on your program of choice and the settings you have made
Its all depends what is the nature of the letter, sometimes yes, sometimes no, or the CEO might get some advice from his/her staff members.
Sometimes servers are busy and you don't get a email to reset. You have to either wait or contact origin support. There might be a chance that you are entering wrong information hence the email is not being received.
* It might be best to ignore it, after all, it may not be true! * I think you it would be a great place to start after all you responded to her husband. You might learn what a greaseball your "boyfriend" is.
because sometimes you might reply to your own message by mistake p.s ive done that before
Celebrities might share their personal information. Also they sometimes might not because they are to bjusy & can't read emails or anything like that.
He's shy. Ask him out somewhere low-impact. He will respond favorably.
They might agree with him
with an email, you can email the places you might be staying or the people you might be going with and so on. i suggest yahoo
it depends on how you feel. sometimes it's best not to respond. some people choose to come home and address it in person. some people write back angry letters. it depends on how you feel. be careful not to write something you might regret, though.
By this do you mean email stored on the internet (e.g. with free providers like gmail, yahoo, hotmail or paid providers)? If so, generally using email on the internet is not a good idea for critical data that is needed at any time, rather then being stored on the computer or local network, as sometimes the email provider's server might (albeit rarely) go down, or your internet connection might not be reliable.