nounplural noun addies
informalAn address, especially an email address.
- ‘I just sent you a note from my other addy’
- ‘In the meantime, of course, anything on his wishlist gets sent to his home addy automatically.’
- ‘How about putting the @ symbol someplace in the addy.’
- ‘Just thought I would add my post, and a email addy.’
- ‘If I could snag his e-mail addy I could ask him which of his predecessors were British.’
- ‘It is free, and they don't sell your addy or spam you.’
- ‘I don't know how they do it, but lately I've been getting a whole bunch of emails addressed only to my addy.’
- ‘I am getting so much spam on an old email addy that I'm going to have to switch it off.’
- ‘Which addy of mine did you send it to?’
- ‘You can find his email addy here.’
- ‘Oh, I adore my dear addy, which has served me so well over the years.’
- ‘Drop me an email (the addy is on the left) if you think you can help.’
- ‘If you want to enter, e-mail me with the answers at the addy on the left.’
- ‘I have a new e-mail addy.’
- ‘I don't have her damn addy.’
- ‘I'll certainly take an email addy or a phone number if someone's willing to give it to me, but I don't insist.’
- ‘If you'd like, I can email my sister's addy, or write her myself, and she could point you toward a good teacher.’
- ‘Hmm, do you think they may have mistyped the addy?’
- ‘Just e-mail me at the addy to the right and I'll pop you right back in.’
- ‘Ray had gotten Alan's addy wrong, so we corrected it without my reading the message, and sent it off again.’
- ‘I already have their email addy and have emailed them several times.’
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