| A | B |
| Hardware connected together to create a massive worldwide network. Consists of components you can physically touch (computers, cables, high-speed communication lines). | network |
| The code used to create web pages. | html |
| Software that sends information that is stored in files along the Internet’s hardware. | internet |
| A single file within a Web site that has a unique name. | webpage |
| Software application that interprets files to display Web page’s on the World Wide Web. Examples include Windows Inter net Explorer, Google Chrome, and Mozilla Firefox. | Web Browser |
| A group of related files organized around a common topic; the files may include Web pages, graphics, audio, and video. | Web site |
| A powerful computer that maintains a consistent connection to the Internet; stores Web pages and makes them available on the Internet. | Web Server |
| Acts as indicators to a web browser as to how the document is to be interpreted by the browser and ultimately presented on the user's computer screen. | Tag |
| An element in an electronic document that links to another place in the same document or to an entirely different document. | Hperlink |
| A unique address that enables a browser to locate specific page files on the web. | URL |
| A set of rules and procedures that specify how data are formatted and transmitted between computer systems. | Protocol |
| Part of a url that identifies the entity (such as a university, individual, or business) that sponsors the Web site. | Domain name |
| The name of the HTML document that makes up the Web page itself. | File name |
| An application that locates information about Web pages and then stores this information in searchable databases that you can access from your browser. | Search engine |