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How email addresses are composed

There are two parts:

  1. Your email name/user name
  2. mail/domain ID

Separated by an @.

User name

This is your own name, or whatever form of it you are using.
There are no rules as a quick review of your friends’ hotmail accounts will reveal.
Organisations impose an order on their employees' email addresses.

Domain

The domain is split into 2 halves

Domains identify the organisation that manages the email account.
You can work out a lot about any domain from its name and the extension.
The domain can have several sections connected with dots, dashes or underlines.
Companies try to register their names, universities their initials, interest groups often spell out their message in the name.

Then there is dreaded dot and the extension.

Extensions or Top-Level Domain (TLD)

These come in many sizes.

The simplest is the 3 letter extension such as .com. These are US-centric and are a legacy of the way the internet's parentage. But it is increasingly common to find a national extension. So .gov or .org implies US based while .gov.jp is Japanese and .de is German.
These are the country code TLDs.
BUT rules are made to be broken and the rapidly sinking Island of Tuvalu makes a good living selling net names with the .tv extension.

Notes

None of the above should be confused with the account name given to you by the host. An account name is whatever the service provider chooses. It might, or might not, resemble your email address.
If you get email from someone and there is no @ sign, they probably have the same domain as you or you have copied it down incorrectly.
The email specifications allows emails to be case sensitive but in practice email IDs are case insensitive, which means that you can use capitals and lower case.
In the UK, Nominet administers the system although some TLDs such as .gov and .plc operate under special rules.
Cyber-squatting has passed its peak. There is an appeal procedure to force owners to give up names to which they have no sensible claim. 

How to guess an address

Knowing this, you can guess the email of somebody who works for a firm or organisation. Put their firstname.secondname@domain - then reverse the names if that does not work and finally try using and removing initials. Have a look at the organisation website which will usually reveal the company convention. If they have common names such as Jones or Mohamed this strategy might not work as they might have numbers added to their addresses to distinguish individuals with the same surnames.

Unfortunately, the general public do not abide by any rules, so you will need other search strategies to find those for whom you cannot locate through their work.

Pronunciation

The @ symbol is pronounced at.
All periods/point/full stops are pronounced dot. (Only insane or perverse people include the word dot in the address).

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