which of the following is not correct about an email header?
The question “which of the following is not correct about an email header?” is typically asking you to spot a statement that describes something that actually belongs to the email body (or is simply false) rather than the header.
In standard theory, an email header includes fields like:
- From (sender’s address)
- To (recipient’s address)
- Date (when the email was sent)
- Subject (what the email is about)
- Optional technical fields such as Message-ID, Reply-To, Return-Path, Content-Type, MIME-Version, etc.
So, in a multiple‑choice setting, the option that is “not correct” will usually be something like:
- “The email header contains the actual message text.”
- “The email header stores the body content and attachments.”
- “The email header is the part where you write your main message.”
- “The email header includes the signature and closing of the email.”
All of those are wrong because the main text, greetings, closing, and signature belong to the body of the email, not the header.
If you share the exact options you have, I can point out precisely which one is not correct.