German

Detailed Translations for URL from German to English

URL:

URL

  1. URL (Uniform Resource Locator; Webadresse; Internetadresse)
    the Uniform Resource Locator; the web address; the Web address; the URL
    – An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension .html or .htm. 1

Translation Matrix for URL:

NounRelated TranslationsOther Translations
URL Internetadresse; URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Webadresse
Uniform Resource Locator Internetadresse; URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Webadresse
Web address Internetadresse; URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Webadresse
web address Internetadresse; URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Webadresse

Synonyms for "URL":




English

Detailed Translations for URL from English to German

url:


Synonyms for "url":

  • URL; uniform resource locator; universal resource locator; address; computer address

URL:

URL [the ~] nom

  1. the URL (Uniform Resource Locator; web address; Web address)
    – An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension .html or .htm. 1

Translation Matrix for URL:

NounRelated TranslationsOther Translations
- uniform resource locator; universal resource locator
Not SpecifiedRelated TranslationsOther Translations
Internetadresse URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Web address; web address Internet address
URL URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Web address; web address
Uniform Resource Locator URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Web address; web address
Webadresse URL; Uniform Resource Locator; Web address; web address

Related Definitions for "URL":

  1. the address of a web page on the world wide web2
  2. An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension .html or .htm.1