Checking your Mail: The Basics
1. Get Mail! The main frame of the Gmail inbox offers a list of your incoming mail. If you just set up your Gmail account, you will likely have only one welcome message automatically sent from the Gmail team. You might want to ask some of your friends to send you messages or send yourself a test message from another e-mail account so that you can begin playing with the features of Gmail.
2. Once you have accumulated some e-mails, checking your Gmail account is easy. Log on and you will be automatically directed to the Inbox. Unread mail appears in bold print. To read an individual message, click on it. If you are using a fully-supported browser, you will also see a star next to each e-mail. You can click on the star to flag important messages.
Working with Your Gmail: Reading, Writing, and Responding to Messages
1. Read your mail. From your Inbox, click on any message. To reply to the e-mail start typing into the box available below. If you click the hypertext "Reply," you will see more options such as the ability to attach a file, or send carbon copies. Replying to the message without editing the subject will enable you to create a thread.
2. One of the most unique features of Gmail is its ability to "thread" your e-mail and read them as you would read a topic on an Internet forum or bulletin board. Threading your e-mail enhances your ability to organize your mail. When you and a friend send e-mails back and forth to one another, each successive reply is collected and organized under one thread. You will automatically create e-mail threads when you and a correspondent have replied to each others' e-mails at least once, and have not altered the subject (also known as the title) of the e-mail.
3. To compose a new e-mail, click on the hypertext button beneath the main Gmail logo that reads "Compose Mail."
Working within Threads
Working with threads might...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now