Create Definition–verb (used with object) | 1. | to cause to come into being, as something unique that would not naturally evolve or that is not made by ordinary processes. | | 2. | to evolve from
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one's own thought or imagination, as a work of art or an invention. | | 3. | Theater. to perform (a role) for the first time or in the first production of a play. | | 4. | to make by investing with new rank or by designating; constitute; appoint: to create a peer. | | 5. | to be the cause or occasion of; give rise to: The announcement created confusion. | | 6. | to cause to happen; bring about; arrange, as by intention or design: to create a revolution; to create an opportunity to ask for a raise. | –verb (used without object) | 7. | to do something creative or constructive. | | 8. | British. to make a fuss. | –adjective | From Dictionary
Web Definition–noun | 1. | something formed by or as if by weaving or interweaving. | | 2. | a thin, silken material spun by spiders and the larvae of some insects, as the webworms and tent caterpillars; cobweb. | | 3. | Textiles. | a. | a woven fabric, esp. a whole piece of cloth in the course of being woven or after it comes from the loom. | | b. | the flat woven strip, without pile, often found at one or both ends of an Oriental rug. | | | 4. | something resembling woven material, esp. something having an interlaced or latticelike appearance: He looked up at the web of branches of the old tree. | | 5. | an intricate set or pattern of circumstances, facts, etc.: The thief was convicted by a web of evidence. Who can understand the web of life? | | 6. | something that snares or entangles; a trap: innocent travelers caught in the web of international terrorism. | | 8. | Zoology. a membrane that connects the digits of an animal, as the toes of aquatic birds. | | 9. | Ornithology. | a. | the series of barbs on each side of the shaft of a feather. | | b. | the series on both sides, collectively. | |
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| 10. | an integral or separate part of a beam, rail, truss, or the like, that forms a continuous, flat, narrow, rigid connection between two stronger, broader parallel parts, as the flanges of a structural shape, the head and foot of a rail, or the upper and lower chords of a truss. | | 11. | Machinery. an arm of a crank, usually one of a pair, holding one end of a crankpin at its outer end. | | 12. | Architecture. (in a vault) any surface framed by ribbing. | | 13. | a large roll of paper, as for continuous feeding of a web press. | | 14. | a network of interlinked stations, services, communications, etc., covering a region or country. | | 15. | Informal. a network of radio or television broadcasting stations. | –verb (used with object) | 17. | to cover with or as if with a web; envelop. | | 18. | to ensnare or entrap. | –verb (used without object) | 19. | to make or form a web. | | From Dictionary
Site Definition–noun | 1. | the position or location of a town, building, etc., esp. as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin. | | 2. | the area or exact plot of ground on which anything is, has been, or is to be located: the site of ancient Troy. | –verb (used with object) | 4. | to place in or provide with a site; locate. | | 5. | to put in position for operation, as artillery: to site a cannon. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaWeb 2.0 next envisioned iteration of the World Wide Web, in which the 2.0 appellation is used in analogy with common computer software naming conventions to indicate a new, improved version. The term had its ...
Social Networking-Making Connections on the Web The world was its most wired ever in 2007, with approximately 1.25 billion people connected to the Internet (19% of the global population). Increasingly, these users eschewed the anonymity that had ...
blog The World Wide Web and the idea of a blog appeared at the same time. Tim Berners-Lee, often described as the Web's inventor, created the first "blog" in 1992 to outline and render visible the ongoing ...
Facebook American company offering online social networking services. Facebook was founded as a social networking Web site in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg, Dustin Moskovitz, and Chris Hughes, all of whom were ...
wiki World Wide Web (WWW) site that can be modified or contributed to by users. Wikis can be dated to 1995, when American computer programmer Ward Cunningham created a new collaborative technology for ...
Computers and Information Systems Privacy was a major concern of those monitoring e-commerce practices. DoubleClick Inc., which provided advertising services to Internet marketers and Web sites, paid settlements in two ...
MySpace.com social networking Web site owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation Ltd. and headquartered in Beverly Hills, Calif.blog In addition to the frequency of updates, the thing that distinguishes most blogs from ordinary Web pages is the inclusion of forums for readers to post comments to which the blogger might respond. ...
eBay global online auction and trading company launched by American entrepreneur Pierre Omidyar in 1995. eBay was one of the first companies to create and market an Internet Web site to match buyers and ...
Computers and Information Systems The legal issue that drew the most attention was the battle between the music-recording industry and various unauthorized Web sites that distributed music for free over the Internet. The recording ...
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