The location of a Web page on the Internet. Web addresses are officially known as Uniform Resource Locators, or URLs for short.
Every website has an address that can be used to locate it. Addresses can usually be identified by their distinctive format. For example, education institutions contain .ac within them, companies contain .co within them and organisations contain .org within them.
A unique address that allows you to access a web site. An example is http://www.salford.ac.uk. Also called an URL (Uniform Resource Locator).
A Web address in Internet Explorer is the location of a Web page or other Internet resource. See also URL.
The location, or URL, of a website, file, or resource on the Internet. For example, http://www.mixedsoul.tk is a web address.
A string of letters and/or numbers that locates a Web page/site on the World Wide Web. For example, Sagebrush Corporation's Web address is www.sagebrushcorp.com.
The string address of a website on the internet, such as: http://www.satellite-tv-hq.com
What an individual types into their web browser to find your site. This is also known as your Domain Name and URL. The web address for Campaign Superstore is www.campaignsuperstore.com.
same as "Uniform Resource Locator" above.
The text that identifies the location a a Web page on the world Wide Web.
Just as a street address is the physical location of a house or building, the Web address is the electronic location of a Web site on the Internet. A Web address is one type of URL.
The path to an object, document, file, page, or other destination. An address can be a URL (Web address) or a UNC path (network address), and can include a specific location within a file, such as a bookmark within a document or a cell range within a spreadsheet.
The Internet address for a Web site
The standard way to address web documents (pages) on the internet e.g. http//www.me.com
The location, or URL, of a web site, file, or resource on the Internet. For example, http://www.webhosts4free.com/ is a web address.
Same as domain name or URL.
The path to an object, document, file, page, or other destination. An address can be a URL (Web address) or a UNC path (network address), and can include a specific location within a file, such as a Word bookmark or an Excel cell range. Also known as address.
An address you use to refer to files or webpages in a web browser. When you type an address into a web browser, you are using a web address. An example of a web address is "http://www.example.com/arthur/photos.html". A web address is a kind of URL. Web addresses can be associated with Fetch addresses using WebView. See the WebView and URLs help topics for more information.
The set of characters or numbers that identifies a computer location on the Internet.
omain name or URL; usually the location currently being viewed in the web browser.
see Uniform Resource Locator (URL) Web administrator, 16.7
The string of letters and or numbers that take the visitor to a website's home page. A typical web address looks something like www.teachernet.gov.uk