Webmaster Forums - Website and SEO Help

Search Engines and Marketing => Search Engine Optimization SEO => Topic started by: Jatinder on August 19, 2020, 06:31:11 AM

Title: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: Jatinder on August 19, 2020, 06:31:11 AM
What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: sinelogixtech on August 20, 2020, 01:28:18 AM
Hi Friend,
A domain is the name of a website, a URL is how to find a website, and a website is what people see and interact with when they get there. In other words, when you buy a domain, you have purchased the name for your site, but you still need to build the site.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: PrimeItSolution on August 20, 2020, 06:46:20 AM
A domain is used to identify ur site. It is easy way of remembering your site instead of remembering IP address. A website is combination of domain name and Hosting.

Domain name is the identity of your website and hosting is where the data is stored on servers and is accessible to users 24/7.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: SinelogixTechnologies on August 20, 2020, 09:34:58 AM
A domain (or domain name) is the name of your website. That's the part after "www" in a web address or after @ in an email address. For instance, if we look at www.facebook.com , then facebook.com is the domain name.

In order to have a website, you need to first register a domain name with a domain registrar, for which you will need to pay a fee (usually annual).

Now, a domain name is just the name of your website. It's what people type in to find it in their browsers. A website, on the other hand, is the content people will see and interact with when they type in or click on that domain name.

Think of a domain name as the address of a house and the website as the actual house, with everything in it, including walls, furniture, windows, etc.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: Anishafatima on August 24, 2020, 06:17:16 AM
A domain is the name of a website, a URL is how to find a website, and a website is what people see and interact with when they get there. In other words, when you buy a domain, you have purchased the name for your site, but you still need to build the site.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: Propertyseo2020 on April 29, 2021, 09:02:55 AM
Domain name is the address of your website that people type in the browser's URL bar to visit your website.A website is a collection of web pages and related content that is identified by a common domain name and published on at least one web server. Notable examples are wikipedia.org, google.com, and amazon.com.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: lincy on May 05, 2021, 09:36:09 AM
A website is a collection of web pages on the world wide web (what you know as the Internet), that lives on a certain domain name.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: Shreecaterers on May 06, 2021, 04:49:03 AM
The difference between a website and a domain is:

A domain name is a form of internet address that's most commonly used to identify websites and email addresses. For example, this website's domain name is winningwp.com, and if you have a Gmail account under, say, name@gmail.com, then gmail.com is the domain name.

A website is what people see when they enter a domain name into their web browsers — it's the collection of pages, files, data, and images that make up the final product that's visible on-screen.
Title: Re: What is the difference between a website and a domain?
Post by: sakshilade01 on August 01, 2023, 08:15:14 AM
A domain is the name of a website, a URL is how to find a website and a website is what people see and interact with when they get there. In other words, when you buy a domain you have purchased the name for your site, but you still need to build the website itself.