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The word 'mailed' is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is a past tense and past participle form of the verb 'mail', which means to send something via post or electronic means. Example: "I mailed the invitation cards to all the guests yesterday." (past tense) "I have already mailed the documents to the office." (past participle).
Exact(24)
Next day, I mailed him his keys, end of story.
His skin was tanned and mailed to the inner side of the main doors a warning to other invaders.
The cities' planning system also includes a feedback mechanism where notices of major projects are mailed to citizens and they are invited to send back their reactions.
Ben secretly prepared two weeks' worth of posts, mailed them to Alex and told his governor what he was going to do.
In a related project, an anthropology doctoral student working for ReD mailed dozens of customers a disposable camera, asking them to photograph something that made them work out.
Having just mailed off the 8mm-thick inheritance-tax foring for my late wife's estate, I dispute that assertion.
Similar(36)
I have e-mailed you through 2 other gmail accounts just to send you idiotic insults.
As well as allowing America to spy on foreigners ad libitum, this allows the government to collect inadvertent content in citizens' communications: for example, if an American has e-mailed a foreigner who is being spied on.
For example, at Ford, which claims to have the world's largest intranet, 170,000 staff around the world are e-mailed a weekly "Let's chat" note from Jac Nasser, the chief executive.
The CIA e-mailed the FBI about al-Mihdhar.
Also in February, a statistician of the health department in Palm Beach County, Florida, inadvertently e-mailed a list of more than 6,000 HIV carriers to all employees of the department.This makes many Americans suspicious of plans that involve sharing sensitive health information.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com