All people use have an unique identity either Gmail or other,
but in Gmail remembers two different types of addresses. First and most obvious, are your contacts--the
people, companies, and organizations that you have intentionally added to your
address book. The other addresses are those that you've sent email to but never
entered as a contact.
But it can also be a problem. You start typing in a friend's name and up come two addresses--the one from your contact list and a dead one you haven't intentionally used in years. And you pick the wrong one.
But it can also be a problem. You start typing in a friend's name and up come two addresses--the one from your contact list and a dead one you haven't intentionally used in years. And you pick the wrong one.
So how do you delete a contact that isn't really one of your
contacts? By pretending that you're about to turn it into one:
This will bring up the page where you can turn this person
into a real contact. You can add or change the name, address, a birthday, and
even a photo.
But that's not what you're here for. Instead, pull down the
More menu near the top of the window and select Delete contact.
It's possible that if you start typing the name into a
message's To field immediately, it will still come up. But if you wait a couple
of minutes, it won't. And it won't ever again.
There is one variant to this: When you select the name, you
might find that the unwanted address is one of several for a real contact whom
you want to keep. You just want to get rid of that particular address.
In that case, don't select Delete Contact. Just click inside
the unwanted address field, press CTRL-a to select the entire address, then
press DELETE.
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